Blessed Be the Low Blood-Pressured
The next image? Stoic.
And as for the last image, that one moved in slow waves.
Well, apparently the slower the images move for you, the better you are at dealing with stress. Amazing.
Have a Shabbat Shalom!
"It's a sign of the times," Mr. Martin said. "People are into beards right now."
-NY Times
As we all know, the New York Times has a tendency to pick up on trends just after they've become the strongest. Think back: last spring, all they talked about were long skirts. But long skirts weren't new, we've been wearing them for years. Think back to when they wrote that article about guys wearing pointy shoes: guys had been wearing pointy shoes for ages before then! Anyway, my point will likely appear in the following paragraph.
I, Dina P., am an awesome trendsetter. That's right, moooooonths before the New York Times had anything on beards, I started the Bring Back Beards Campaign. With representatives in New York (Randy, Zvi), Israel (Michael, Zac), Oregon (Logan), and Ohio (Gene), and a fast growing rate of joinage, the BBBC is the hottest thing now.
I will now point to a paragraph from one of my very own articles on Punks titled "Good-Bye Beards"
Yes, I love beards. I was speaking to a friend last night (formerly the spokesperson for my Bring Back Beards Campaign*) who remarked, "oh, so you must love Sean Connery." In fact, I don't. Sean Connery may have a beard, but he's an older man. Beards on older men are just older men beards. Beards on young men are hot. There's no denying that something like this isn't amazingly gorgeous. Why are beards on younger guys hot? I don't know, but they are.
And back to the NYTimes article:
"This is some sort of reaction to men who look scrubbed, shaved, plucked and waxed," said the designer Bryan Bradley, who stepped onto the runway after his Tuleh presentation looking like a renegade from the John Bartlett show, at which more than half the models wore beards: untidy ones that scaled a spectrum from wiry to ratty to shabby to fully bushy.
"It's less 'little boy,' " Mr. Bradley said. "For a while men have looked too much like Boy Scouts going off to day camp."
But I have one tiny problem with the article and that's that they didn't come to me for a quote. As the authority on beards on guys, I'm in shock. And don't think that they didn't know, only a short month (February is the shortest) and nineteen days ago, I sent a letter to the editor of the NYTimes about beards in which I mention my status:
Date: Tue, 14 Feb 2006
Subject: Sometimes Things Aren't as Difficult as They Seem
To: letters@nytimes.com
I just wanted to inform you that there is a mistake in Josh Foer's op-ed "The Kiss of Life". He writes, "The Germans are also said to have coined the inexplicable phrase 'A kiss without a beard is like an egg without salt.'" "Inexplicable"? I think not! It is clear that an egg without salt is devoid of taste (something crucial for eggs, lest they taste too rubbery). This is, therefore, a simple equation. A kiss without a beard is as awful as a rubbery, unflavored egg. But then, as the leader of the Bring Back Beards Campaign, I am a little biased.
Otherwise, I very much enjoyed his article. You can pass this along to him.
Thank you,
Dina P.
I am shocked. Shocked!
A basic change the brain undergoes with age may also be reversible with training. Older brains often use both the left and right half of a region for something young brains do with only one side. Sometimes that improves performance. Older adults who activate both the left and right prefrontal regions, which are involved in memory, have pretty good short-term memory, says Illinois' Kirk Erickson. The reason may be that two-sided activation of the prefrontal regions compensates for deficits in the hippocampus. In contrast, on tasks such as judgment, decision-making, concentration and multitasking, two-sided activation seems to impair performance, as if the brain is too scattered.While reading the article, it occured to me that I understood what the old people were going through a lot more than the young people. Perhaps I'm not a ditz; perhaps I'm just old.
Yet in a study published online last month in Neurobiology of Aging, Dr. Erickson and Illinois' Arthur Kramer found that old brains can be trained to act like young ones.So armed with the hope that my brain can be trained back into sharpness, I had my mother photocopy the NYTimes crossword puzzle before she started it this morning so that I could do it. (Since I tried ones I found on the internet and they're just not as good.) And I played chess last night on Yahoo!. I'm thinking I should also try doing nightly math problems.
At first, the brains of older adults (age 55 to 80) had the characteristic two-sided activation and made more mistakes than young brains. But after five hours of practicing and receiving feedback, the older brains got better -- and showed one-sided activity, like the young.
"This suggests that the brains of older adults remain relatively flexible, able to alter brain circuits in response to training," says Dr. Erickson.
Yes, brains age. But their ability to remake themselves and respond to training is undeniable.
So I was Watching the Press Conference Today...
"Wait a minute--no hand gestures please."
-Pres. Bush
Zvi: this person was sitting like 3 rows in front of us or something
me: um
me: Zvi...
Zvi: was it u
me: HAHHAHAHAHAHAHA
Yeah...
Labels: tales from 932
I sat down in the seat nearest the door and opened my book to begin the reading for class. I looked through the table of contents, found the right essay, and got to work. Only thing was that it felt like something was missing. As a matter of fact, something was very much missing.
“We were supposed to write up a reading response for this, weren’t we?” I asked the guy to my right.
“Holy bleep.”
I looked at the girl to his right, since we sit in a circle, and asked her if she had forgotten it, too. Fortunately, she had. The three of us attempted to conspire a plan that would make the teacher forget to collect the papers, but could think of nothing.
By the time we got to the reading, our ongoing argument over who would represent us to the teacher was over and I had lost.
“Professor,” I raised my hand, “I have something to comment on relating to the reading, but not concerning it.”
“Oh, okay. Go on.”
“Prior to class, we found that there is a common consensus among a few students that since we haven’t done an official reading in a while, we just fell out of the loop and forgot to write responses.”
“Ah, well,” She said, “less work for me to do!”
Awesome would work to describe this if she were the kind of teacher who didn’t care about her students doing homework. But she cares a lot about those things. Which is why this was (dum da dum) ridiculously awesome.