Wednesday, June 20, 2007

THE INTENTION EXPERIMENT -CREATING REALITY


Maybe just one good thought is all it takes to change the world.

Do you have believe in the power of intention or that prayer can influence the outcome of a situation? Have you ever used your intention to create your reality? I believe we all do this every day in our personal lives and on larger scales when we congregate and work together for one cause. The collective consciousness if you will is a conglomerate of our true intentions as a human race. Is it possible to make real changes if enough individuals focus on the same intention? Can we create The Hundredth Monkey Effect?

I just learned today that Lynne McTaggart is conducting intention experiments on the internet. The next experiment is set for July 7th at 5pm GTM and I believe this is 1pm Eastern Daylight-Savings Time. Check her website out at The Intention Experiment.

What we are capable of is only limited by our imagination...

My intention focus right now is on my daughter and her health. She is 8 years old and is a wonderful and very kind hearted kid who happens to have diabetes. She has had it since she was 18 months old and tomorrow her diabetes treatment will change from 4 shots a day to the diabetes pump. This means that she will no longer need shots and her blood sugar levels should be better regulated. We are all excited to make this change as it will allow her more freedom in her life and will lessen possible complications with diabetes later in her life. She is such a courageous kid and I am a proud parent. I wish her an easy transition to the pump.

Friday, June 15, 2007

ANCIENT JAPANESE SECRET -MATCHA TEA


I had been a coffee drinker for 18 years until a month ago when I discovered matcha tea. Matcha tea is ultimately one of the finest beverages I have consumed on many levels and the case may be that my love affair with coffee has come to an end. Initially, I experienced some sadness in departing from my daily 2 to 3 cups of my favorite Joe every morning and after a month I admit that on occasion I think about the taste of a good strong cup of black liquid gold. However, over the years I have developed some aversions to coffee, for instance my stomach aches at times when I drink too much, I get jittery from time to time, I get that late morning crash from caffeine depletion and sometimes headaches that follow. So when I stumbled upon matcha tea and read that the caffeine content combined with amino acids in green tea is more slowly absorbed, the effects on your system is different from coffee - more subtle and relaxing. I found that regular green tea is stimulating and pleasant but does not compare to the ground matcha form in regard to taste. Also, it seems that matcha is the healthier choice due to the fact that you consume the entire leaf and receive more of the health benefits that researchers have found in green tea.

Personally, I have found that matcha tea does not have any of the side effects I found with coffee and is stimulating and calming at the same time. Apparently, Zen Buddhists have been consuming matcha for centuries prior to meditation and find that it aids them in their practice. I encourage anyone looking for an alternative to coffee to try matcha tea. It is also fun to prepare. The only draw back is that it is somewhat expensive and it seems to only be available online (at least in this area).


Here are some of the health benefits:

Tea and Health

Not only is tea soothing and delicious, but, throughout its history, it has been associated with important health benefits. New studies point to evidence that these healing properties have a scientific basis. While all tea is healthy to drink, Green tea contains the highest level of polyphenols (flavonoids), which are known for their antioxidant activity.

Consumption of tea is being studied for its reported benefits on:

* Enhancing immune function
* Lowering LDL cholesterol levels
* Increasing HDL cholesterol levels
* Reducing blood pressure
* Thinning the blood, reducing the risk of a heart attack
* Lowering the risk of stroke
* Reducing the risk of cancer
* Boosting longevity
* Aiding digestion
* Preventing dental cavities and gingivitis


Much of the focus of modern research is on the effects of three ingredients found in tea:

* Antioxidants (Polyphenols)
* Nutrients
* Caffeine

Antioxidants

Many of the health benefits of drinking tea come from the fact that tea contains high levels of antioxidants called polyphenols or flavonoids. These compounds are most prevalent in green and white teas, but are also present in varying degrees in Oolongs and black teas. In the processing of black teas another antioxidant is formed – theaflavin. This is weaker than the polyphenols in Green teas, but still performs antioxidant activities in laboratory experiments. Polyphenols scavenge cell-damaging free radicals, which are linked with cancer-causing genes and cause LDL cholesterol to form artery-clogging plaque. The polyphenols in tea possess 20 to 30 times the antioxidant potency of vitamins C and E. Antioxidants impair the ability of free radical cells to harm the molecules that make up our bodies.

copied from -http://www.inpursuitoftea.com/Health_Benefits_of_Tea_s/33.htm

Watch Matcha Tea Preparation: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y1MP_zaXNOg

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Saturday, June 9, 2007

PARADE THE CIRCLE - PART IV



GREAT PARADE! RISE UP CLEVELAND!


Technorati Profile

PARADE THE CIRCLE - PART III

PARADE THE CIRCLE - PART II

PARADE THE CIRCLE, CLEVELAND, OHIO



COOLEST PARADE EVER! CHECK OUT THE PHOTOS.


This tribute to creativity and community takes place each June in University Circle. Enjoy the celebration, based on ethnic gatherings around the world. A non-traditional art parade at noon features participants wearing self-made costumes, dancers and non-motorized floats. On Wade Oval, tents house interactive activities sponsored by local cultural and educational institutions. Performers and food booths complete the sights, sounds and tastes of this celebration.

Property Information by Wcities

Thursday, March 22, 2007

NO TOILET PAPER FOR A YEAR!



I thought I was doing my part by driving less and purchasing products with less packaging but this guy and his family are giving up toilet paper for a year and using worms to eat their garbage!


By PENELOPE GREEN

DINNER was the usual affair on Thursday night in Apartment 9F in an elegant prewar on Lower Fifth Avenue. There was shredded cabbage with fruit-scrap vinegar; mashed parsnips and yellow carrots with local butter and fresh thyme; a terrific frittata; then homemade yogurt with honey and thyme tea, eaten under the greenish flickering light cast by two beeswax candles and a fluorescent bulb.

A sour odor hovered oh-so-slightly in the air, the faint tang, not wholly unpleasant, that is the mark of the home composter. Isabella Beavan, age 2, staggered around the neo-Modern furniture — the Eames chairs, the brown velvet couch, the Lucite lamps and the steel cafe table upon which dinner was set — her silhouette greatly amplified by her organic cotton diapers in their enormous boiled-wool, snap-front cover.

A visitor avoided the bathroom because she knew she would find no toilet paper there.

Meanwhile, Joseph, the liveried elevator man who works nights in the building, drove his wood-paneled, 1920s-era vehicle up and down its chute, unconcerned that the couple in 9F had not used his services in four months. “I’ve noticed,” Joseph said later with a shrug and no further comment. (He declined to give his last name. “I’ve got enough problems,” he said.)

Welcome to Walden Pond, Fifth Avenue style. Isabella’s parents, Colin Beavan, 43, a writer of historical nonfiction, and Michelle Conlin, 39, a senior writer at Business Week, are four months into a yearlong lifestyle experiment they call No Impact. Its rules are evolving, as Mr. Beavan will tell you, but to date include eating only food (organically) grown within a 250-mile radius of Manhattan; (mostly) no shopping for anything except said food; producing no trash (except compost, see above); using no paper; and, most intriguingly, using no carbon-fueled transportation.

Mr. Beavan, who has written one book about the origins of forensic detective work and another about D-Day, said he was ready for a new subject, hoping to tread more lightly on the planet and maybe be an inspiration to others in the process.

Also, he needed a new book project and the No Impact year was the only one of four possibilities his agent thought would sell. This being 2007, Mr. Beavan is showcasing No Impact in a blog (noimpactman.com) laced with links and testimonials from New Environmentalist authorities like treehugger.com. His agent did indeed secure him a book deal, with Farrar, Straus & Giroux, and he and his family are being tailed by Laura Gabbert, a documentary filmmaker and Ms. Conlin’s best friend.

Why there may be a public appetite for the Colin-Beavan family doings has a lot to do with the very personal, very urban face of environmentalism these days. Thoreau left home for the woods to make his point (and secure his own book deal); Mr. Beavan and Ms. Conlin and others like them aren’t budging from their bricks-and-mortar, haut-bourgeois nests.

Mr. Beavan looks to groups like the Compacters (sfcompact.blogspot.com), a collection of nonshoppers that began in San Francisco, and the 100 Mile Diet folks (100milediet.org and thetyee.ca), a Vancouver couple who spent a year eating from within 100 miles of their apartment, for tips and inspiration. But there are hundreds of other light-footed, young abstainers with a diarist urge: it is not news that this shopping-averse, carbon-footprint-reducing, city-dwelling generation likes to blog (the paperless, public diary form). They have seen “An Inconvenient Truth”; they would like to tell you how it makes them feel. If Al Gore is their Rachel Carson, blogalogs like Treehugger, grist.org and worldchanging.com are their Whole Earth catalogs.

Andrew Kirk, an environmental history professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, whose new book, “Counterculture Green: The Whole Earth Catalog and American Environmentalism,” will be published by University Press of Kansas in September, is reminded of environmentalism’s last big bubble, in the 1970s, long before Ronald Reagan pulled federal funding for alternative fuel technologies (and his speechwriters made fun of the spotted owl and its liberal protectors, a deft feat of propaganda that set the movement back decades). Those were the days when Stewart Brand and his Whole Earth writers, Mr. Kirk said, “focused on a brand of environmentalism that kept people in the picture.”

“That’s the thing about this current wave of environmentalism,” he continued. “It’s not about, how do we protect some abstract pristine space? It’s what can real people do in their home or office or whatever. It’s also very urban. It’s a critical twist in the old wilderness adage: Leave only footprints, take only photographs. But how do you translate that into Manhattan?”

With equals parts grace and calamity, it appears. Washed down with a big draught of engaging palaver.

Before No Impact — this is a phrase that comes up a lot — Ms. Conlin and Mr. Beavan were living a near parody of urban professional life. Ms. Conlin, who bought this apartment in 1999 when she was still single, used the stove so infrequently (as in, never, she said) that Con Edison called to find out if it was broken. (Mr. Beavan, now the family cook, questioned whether she had yet to turn it on. Ms. Conlin ignored him.)

In this household, food was something you dialed for.

“We would wake up and call ‘the man,’ ” Ms. Conlin said, “and he would bring us two newspapers and coffee in Styrofoam cups. Sometimes we’d call two men, and get bagels from Bagel Bob’s. For lunch I’d find myself at Wendy’s, with a Dunkin’ Donuts chaser. Isabella would point to guys on bikes and cry: ‘The man! The man!’ ”

Since November, Mr. Beavan and Isabella have been hewing closely, most particularly in a dietary way, to a 19th-century life. Mr. Beavan has a single-edge razor he has learned to use (it was a gift from his father). He has also learned to cook quite tastily from a limited regional menu — right now that means lots of apples and root vegetables, stored in the unplugged freezer — hashing out compromises. Spices are out but salt is exempt, Mr. Beavan said, because homemade bread “is awful without salt; salt stops the yeast action.” Mr. Beavan is baking his own, with wheat grown locally and a sour dough “mother” fermenting stinkily in his cupboard. He is also finding good sources at the nearby Union Square Greenmarket (like Ronnybrook Farm Dairy, which sells milk in reusable glass bottles). The 250-mile rule, by the way, reflects the longest distance a farmer can drive in and out of the city in one day, Mr. Beavan said.

Copied from New York Times 3/22/07


Have you given up anything or changed the way you live to have less of an impact on the environment?

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

WHEATLAND MUSIC FESTIVAL



Time to start getting excited about heading to Remus, Michigan for one of the best traditional music festivals I am aware of. Three happy days of camping, hanging out, making music and listening to bluegrass, folk and other traditional sounds in a beautiful wooded area of Michigan. Something to look forward to each year. Wheatland is very family friendly with kids activities going on all weekend.

Wheatland's History

In the early seventies a small group of Mt. Pleasant Food Co-Op members and local musicians were staging free concerts and benefits around Big Rapids and Mt. Pleasant. Common sites were city parks and public halls. Proceeds enabled the food co-op to pay rent and utilities, barely. Meanwhile some of us were learning the rudiments for organizing indoor and outdoor musical events. There seemed to be just enough help to organize two concerts a month during the summer.

There were only a couple weekend festivals around Mid-Michigan at the time, one in Midland and the Stringbean Memorial in Charlotte. Dick Tarrier told us about the Stringbean Memorial and the Pine River Valley Boys led us to the festival in Charlotte. There is one bearded fiddler from Remus who will never forget sitting around a campfire at Charlotte with some older bluegrass fiddlers playing, "Listen to the Mockingbird." It is impossible to bottle and sell a jam session, but there are ways to stimulate such foolishness.

Gradually we tried to stir up some interest around Remus to attempt a one-day event and test the waters. Most people laughed at such notions and others were fearful or suspicious as to just what was going on. But the key to our motivation was feeling that enough people would attend a local festival that probably would not attend any of the more popular southern festivals. Mecosta County is not known for its farmers leaving home during the harvest season to travel to a fiddler's convention in West Virginia. So we thought a local old-time music festival would be welcomed.

The secret was getting enough help to make it happen. We also needed a suitable site, entertainment, electricity, a stage, a sound system, refreshments, first-aid, permits and volunteers. With a core group less than a dozen, and the help of a tractor and brush-hog, the wheels were in motion for the First Wheatland Bluegrass Festival as a benefit for the Mt. Pleasant Food Co-Op, August 24, 1974.

The Rhode family offered their farm, located four miles east of Remus on M-20. June Rhodes' utility room became festival headquarters, her backyard was the backstage area, and her sister-in-law's yard across the road was the parking lot. The flatbed trailers were in place along with the first-aid tent, a sound system, and a hotdog stand. Everything was planned to work and we gave it our best effort.

Several hundred people attended the First Wheatland Festival and it did go quite well. Perhaps the single most important attendee was the local postmaster. Before the first festival was even over he had already offered the use of his farm for the next year. The one improvement he could offer was a hayfield instead of corn stubble and dirt. All in all he knew just what the festival idea needed.

Who was that postmaster? And why would he want hundreds of strangers sleeping across his 160-acre backyard? What would his wife have to say about this? Mark and Gladys Wernette were contemplating taking a big step towards an uncertain future. But like their parents, Mecosta County's Alsatian pioneers, Mark and Gladys were committed to what they thought was their civic responsibility and offered to lend a hand.

By 1975 Wheatland was born. Elections were held and the board of directors was established. Many of the first directors are still active in the organization. This can be attributed to their faith in each other and their commitment to community service.

Attempts were made to keep the new organization as loose and manageable as possible. The only agreement we had was a hug-and-a-handshake understanding with the Wernettes to use their farm, and to take things one year at a time. We now set about fitting the festival to the farm.

It was time to exert some technical muscle. All we had for a stage was a sawhorse platform. But with a few boards, elbow grease and heavy black plastic (in case of rain) our main (and only) stage would be presentable. The pine grove would do nicely as a backdrop. Can jack pines enhance sound? I don't know, but for want of the perfect amphitheater, this centrally situated field became our main seating area. The backfields were thought to be more room than anyone could imagine for camping. But no fires please! For fire patrols we had a truck-mounted horse trough with some rakes and shovels.

For power we turned to Remus resident Frank Blanzy. Power was running out of the basement of the Wernette farmhouse all the way to the main stage with a series of extension cords. There was no money to install electricity so we used the closest source and the most available material. Frank became the official Wheatland technician for over ten years. When work was needed to power the main stage, Frank came forward. His efforts were tremendous and well done. We thank him for all his contributions to many years of successful festivals. He did have two able assistants for the overhead work. Don Lawrence and David Sands climbed and wired all the poles. And it was Dick Ray who came up with the floodlights for the concert area. Thanks fellows.

The shelter aspect of an outdoor festival got attention after power was figured out. Tents were needed and the Beal City Knights of Columbus had some to rent. If they could endure the Beal City Heritage Days as a beer tent, then they should hold up for our purposes. Don Stover and the White Oak Mountain Boys headlined the second festival with the Williams Family, the Kentucky Grass, the R.F.D. Boys, the Pine River Valley Boys, the Sunset Express, and the Stillhouse Stringband - the first band to appear at Wheatland featuring Dick Tarrier. Tickets were $5.00 in advance or $3.50 per day at the gate. Dan McGuire was well into his collection of excellent artwork for Wheatland posters and flyers. Thanks Dan for many years of fine artistic promotion. The weather became apparent that rain could stifle events in a thunderous fashion as the weekend began. In fact, it was a soaking weekend at best. In between all the fury of a late summer's storm very little festival happened on Saturday. Bands arrived but there was little hope of performing with so much rain in the forecast. By early Sunday morning most of the bands had left - the festival was a total washout. An hour or two of Sunday afternoon sunshine allowed for an impromptu gathering of musicians and singers to lead a bunch of old favorites, but for all practical purpose it was time to throw in the muddy towel. Several hundred vehicles were sunk down to their axles in the topsoil of what was always a wet farm to work anyway. The scene on Monday was reminiscent of the day following the Battle of Gettysburg when a powerful thunderstorm soaked the landscape. Except in 1863 horses hauled away the remains, whereas in 1975 tractors were recruited to hoist the mud-covered campers out to the road. The ruts that were left from that weekend still stripe the fields. Out of the futility of 1975 the organization still forged ahead. We still had the farm and Mark Wernette had some machinery to smooth out the rough spots. The festival date was moved to the weekend after Labor Day for 1976 where it remains eleven years [now thirty-two years] later.



Now - if your headed to Wheatland this year and would like to see the Avett Brothers perform - send a quick email to their booking agent at: paullohr@newfrontiertouring.com

Happy Wheatland!

The Avett Brothers

Left On Laura - The Avett Brothers - Greensboro

Compelled to post another Avett Brothers video. Folk music that kicks ass!

The Avett Brothers - Talk On Indolence

Newbie to The Avett Brothers - saw them at the Kent Stage in Kent, Ohio last Thursday night. Wow, check them out if you haven't heard them. They provide a new twist on bluegrass/folk. I will never play the banjo the same way again.

Tuesday, March 6, 2007

Internet Closed for the Holidays?


I heard a story the other day about a coworker who had a cognitive lapse during a holiday and apparently confused the US Postal Service and Email and exclaimed, 'Do you think the Internet is closed on holidays, will my email be delivered?' Is this ignorance or a momentary lapse of reason? -Either way it was too funny not to post.

Has anyone ever forgotten that they were just told a story and proceeded to tell the same story to the same individual believing for a second that they heard the story from someone else? Perhaps, impairment from substances?

When I was 8 years old and my brother 5, we were part of a neighborhood carpool and one afternoon the women driving us home pulled into her garage, shut the garage door and went into the house. For what seemed like 15 minutes my brother and I sat there talking and wondering if we should open the garage or go in the house before she came leaping out and apologized for forgetting about taking us home. Too many things on her mind?

I know someone who needs to keep a log of movies that she has rented as she has started many movies only to find out a third of the way through that she rented the same movie in the past. Just plain forgetful?

My great-grandmother used to read Harlequin Romance Novels and traded books with people but didn't care which ones she got as they were all "new" to her. Forgiven, she was in her nineties.

And my confession and perhaps the reason for writing this post: The other day while driving with a client I stopped at a stop sign and waited for a few minutes for the light to change red! I looked at my client and proceeded to talk and he looked at me quizzically and I looked at the stop sign and back at him and then the moment of eureka occurred, the neurons finally fired and of course, I understood my little slip of cognition. Embarrassing perhaps, but if only I knew what was to come.

Anyone over the age of 30 has experienced some sort of mental lapse from time to time and usually it provides amusing antidotes as long as no one gets hurt and as long as we continue to laugh at ourselves and enjoy the fallibility of being human. However, knowing that our mental faculties decline with age it seems worth looking into preserving our cognitive abilities for as long as we can. We've all heard about taking up a second language, doing daily crossword puzzles, Sudoku, and other brain teasers, writing with opposite hand, etc. But what about smart drugs? At this time, are there viable smart drugs that can help slow down mental decline?

Here is a list of current smart drugs or nootropics copied from Wikipedia:

* 5-HTP
* Adrafinil (Olmifon)
* Aniracetam
* Ashwagandha (Withania somnifera)
* Bacopa monnieri (Brahmi)
* Caffeine
* Acetyl-L-carnitine (ALCAR)
* Centrophenoxine
* Choline
* Cholinergics
* Chromium
* Coenzyme q-10
* Creatine
* DMAE
* Ergoloid mesylates (Hydergine)
* Huperzine A
* Idebenone
* Inositol
* L-dopa
* Lecithin
* Lemon Balm (Melissa Officinalis)
* Lipoic acid
* Methylphenidate (Ritalin)
* Modafinil (Provigil)
* Nicotine
* Oxiracetam
* Phenibut
* Phenylalanine
* Piracetam (Nootropil)
* Pramiracetam
* Pyritinol (Enerbol)
* Rhodiola Rosea
* Selegiline (Deprenyl)
* Siberian ginseng (Eleutherococcus senticosus)
* St John's Wort
* Sutherlandia Frutescens
* Theanine
* Theophylline
* Tryptophan
* Tyrosine
* Vasopressin
* Vinpocetine
* Nicotinic acid (vitamin B3)
* Vitamin B5
* Vitamin B6
* Vitamin B12
* Vitamin C
* Yohimbe

The Internet has extensive information on smart drugs but not much in the way of testimonials other than on sites that are trying to sell their products. I am interested in real life experiences with anyone that has tried smart drugs (excluding caffeine and nicotine - I have first hand knowledge with those) or have known someone to try smart drugs and experienced results, side-effects or found that they are a waste of time and money. Maybe you have used smart drugs to study for an exam or write a thesis or to keep from forgetting where you put your car keys?

I suppose we have only scratched the surface of the possibilities of cognitively enhancing our gray matter but perhaps some of the items listed above are worth talking about.

And please share a lapse in cognitive functioning story if you have one.

Fun Quiz - Are you a forgetful person?

Saturday, March 3, 2007

That Calming Effect: Q-Link Debuts Bracelet

Q-Link, Golf and Wellness



The wonderful and frustrating game of golf...the season is rapidly approaching in Northeastern, Ohio (curses to those that can play year round) and that means 3 things: 1. Time away from my wife...okay, scratch that one.2. Beer, nature and relaxation. 3. The constant struggle to improve one's game.

Game improvement is something I and every golfer take a swing at every season with renewed vitality, claiming wholeheartedly, 'this is my break-out season!' Personally, it is usually futile but without a sense of hope we might give up the game altogether and this my friend is not an option in my book! After all, this could be the season that I break 80 or make that forever chasing hole-in-one or back to back eagles. The game is way too enticing, which every golfer understands and every non-golfer remains confused and makes jokes about why anyone thinks chasing a small white ball around is worth the time and effort. Anyway, my season usually starts out strong. I work my ass off trying to improve my technique, reading tips and hitting endless balls into nets and frequenting the driving range at my lunch break or after work. However, within a few weeks I fall into my old rut of persistent slicing, duffed shots, overcompensated putts and any attempt at self-improvement goes by the way of beer consumption. Ultimately, it is much like the whole New Year's Resolution quandary.

Now, being well aware of the fact that the game of golf has more gimmicks and ways to improve your game tips than any other sport in existence, I am quite leery of any quick fixes that prey on the desperate. I know improvement comes from hard work; including quality lessons and endless hours of focused practice. A top of the line driver may give you a few extra yards or improve accuracy but you need to have some understanding of proper technique first. However, this year I am going out on a limb and decided that I am willing to entertain the idea of being suckered into trying out a quick fix product for the sake of experimentation and to give my mind a quick burst of hope prior to starting the season. I am planning on posting updates periodically to report my results throughout the season.

As the title suggests - I have been duped into trying out the Q-Link.

Here's a run-down from their website:

The Q-Link’s fundamental technology can be understood by imagining a tuning fork that vibrates at a certain pitch. Similarly, the Q-Link’s Sympathetic Resonant Technology™ (SRT™) is tuned to optimize the human energy system through resonance. As it interacts with your biofield, it leads to a rebalancing and restoration according to your individual needs.

A Library of Research Studies



SRT has proven its effectiveness in a wide range of experiments, including trials at UC Irvine, University of Vienna, and Imperial College London, all of which demonstrated significant effects on living systems. Research highlights:
· Doctors who tested the Q-Link found that it instantaneously amplified healthy energy states – and decreased energy drains caused by a wide variety of stressors.
· In brainwave studies (EEG), the Q-Link reduced the harmful effects of EMFs – the fields around computers, cell phones and other devices.
· World-class athletes reported that the Q-Link improved their mental focus and endurance, giving them a significant competitive edge.
· In live blood studies, the Q-Link led to greater cellular integrity and more efficient blood oxygenation.
The new Q-Link features next-generation SRT 3, which enables the device to more efficiently resonate life-supporting frequencies in the biofield and activate a more powerful response to stress. Most people will notice heightened energy, quicker effects, and a more rapid return to centered emotional balance.
“My intuition and logic suggest that Clarus type products will be an important part of humanity’s future.”
William Tiller, Ph.D. Professor Emeritus, Stanford University and Guggenheim Fellow, USA
We are also exploring new potential SRT applications, such as enhancing water, increasing agricultural yields and refining chemical manufacturing processes.

www.clarus.com

Testimonials

Ted Purdy
2005 Byron Nelson Classic Winner
"I began wearing a Q-Link pendant about three months ago. Since then I have focused with greater clarity and have performed better under pressure... the greatest benefit I have to show is my first PGA Tour victory, which I am ecstatic to say Q-Link played a big role in."

Mark Calcavecchia
Broke 48 year PGA scoring record while wearing Q-Link
"When I started wearing the Q-Link in 2001 it was the best streak of playing golf I have ever had. I feel calmer, less nervous and less anxious, which is a good thing in professional golf."

Lorena Ochoa
2006 LPGA Player of the Year
Winner of 3 LPGA Titles
Won 6 times wearing Q-Link in 2006
"Since I started using my Q-Link, I have won 3 times and I feel calmer in tough situations, it really makes a difference under pressure. It works for me!

Bruce Fleisher
U.S. Senior Open Winner
"The tournament before the Senior Open, I put on the Q-Link and finished second. The next week I went out and won the Open. I definitely feel calmer since I began wearing the Q-Link. I would have to say in situations where I hit a bad shot, it didn't bother me as much. I find it easier to recover now from a bad shot. I don't know how it works or what it does, but if you ask me if I'm going to take it off, I say hell no! You don't fool with success!"

Birdie Kim
Women's U.S. Open Champion
"The Q-Link has helped me with my energy and focus on and off the course and it played a significant role in my victory at the U.S. Open."

My reason for choosing Q-Link - I have experienced focused, "in-the-zone," golf but these moments have been far and few between - so I wonder if the Q-Link can help me relax more during critical shots or putts and gain a better focus.

I will let you know. If anyone has any personal experience with Q-Link and you do not work for the company or sell the product- feel free to post comment.

Good luck with your golf game!

Thursday, March 1, 2007

The Samples


The very first Samples show I went to was at the Ira Allen Chapel in Burlington, Vermont. It was one of my favorite shows - right up there with Tom Waits in Akron, Ohio. The Samples are playing at the Ira Allen Chapel tomorrow night (3/2) - wish I could be there. The Samples are an under-rated band and have persevered over the years without mainstream marketing or radio play (except for 102.7 WEQX out of Manchester, VT). It's great to hear they are still making great music!

Check them out at: MySpace - The Samples

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Church Hosts Conference on 'Ex-Gay' Therapy


Very interesting article. We can all get healed from our gay tendencies! My wife will be pleased! Why don't they come up with a therapy for pedophilic priests or do they have that already? If gayness is wiped out - what will happen to men's fashion?

Church Hosts Conference on 'Ex-Gay' Therapy

Audio for this story will be available at approx. 7:30 p.m. ET

All Things Considered, February 28, 2007 · The controversial idea that counseling and therapy can overcome homosexual tendencies is at the heart of what's called the "ex-gay movement." Proponents of ways that gays and lesbians can be "cured" recently held a conference in Phoenix, Ariz.

The notion has been in the news recently, in connection with the former pastor of the New Life Church in Colorado. Ted Haggard resigned from the church in November, after his relationship with a male prostitute became public.

He has been meeting with leaders of the church, and one of them said recently that Haggard "is on the road to recovery."

Bethany Bible Church in Phoenix recently held an all-day event called Love Won Out, sponsored by Focus on the Family. The essential message is that homosexuality can be overcome through therapy and devotion to Jesus Christ.

That was the theme put forward by Alan Chambers, one of the speakers at the event.

"You know what, God did an amazing work in my life and I am so proud every day to be a living, breathing example of his grace, and his mercy and his transformation," Chambers said in a talk titled "Help for Those Who Struggle."

About 75 men and women were in the audience to hear Chambers, who acknowledged his own past. "The truth is, I used to be gay," he said at one point. "Big whoop."

Chambers is president of Exodus International, an umbrella group for many Christian ex-gay ministries. He says more and more people who are uncomfortable with their same-sex attraction are seeking what some in the ex-gay movement call "reparative" therapy.

"Cure is not a word that I would ever use," Chambers said. "Certainly that's not what we're advocating with regards to homosexuality. But we are saying is that it is a condition that people have found freedom from, they have changed."

Clinton Anderson directs the Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Concerns Office in Washington, D.C., for the American Psychological Association. The APA says so-called "conversion therapy" is not supported by science.

"We have the concern first of all that the therapies have never been adequately demonstrated to be safe or effective," Anderson says, "and that the promotion of such therapies contributes to the climate of prejudice and discrimination in this country."

But leaders in the ex-gay movement say thousands of Americans are now living as former-homosexuals, and that each person should have the right to decide for themselves what is best.

At the conference, about a hundred protestors stood outside, chanting. Many say they find the conference offensive, and that gays and lesbians shouldn't need to change who they are, regardless of their religion.

Among them were Pennie and Mark Vatcher of San Diego, along with their son Brett. They made the 350-mile drive to hear the testimonials. Brett Vatcher, 16, says he's knows he's gay.

"I did not want to come at all," he says, laughing. "But I guess, you know, I have no choice because my parents, you know, they control my life."

Brett's parents are both devout Christians; they say they just want what's best for their son. They're considering therapeutic programs to help Brett become heterosexual. His mother, Pennie, says the conference was inspiring.

"Even though my son right now at this point is not desiring to be anything following the Lord," she says, "I believe seeds are planted today, and I have the faith that it's going to be growing, watering through his life and one day he will accept Christ."

Brett says he listened with interest to the formerly gay speakers and found their stories compelling. But, standing next to his mom and dad, Brett admits he's not interested in any kind of therapy.

"Don't tell my parents but no; I know I'm gay, and like, their stories are really inspiring but I know this is me and I don't really want to change."

Brett's dad, Mark, said the conference taught him he needs to learn he needs to love his son? unconditionally.

"Absolutely," he says, "love him forever."

But he also says the weekend renewed his hopes that one day his son will become straight.

From member station KJZZ, Rene Gutel reports.

How sad...when will we ever start accepting people for who they are? Where's the cure or therapy for intolerance?


Tuesday, February 27, 2007

VORTEXES - REALITY OR FANTASY?


Many years ago, I visited Sedona, Arizona and found it to be one of the most beautiful places in North America. I am no world traveler by any means but I have yet to find a place with such natural aesthetics and an overall "mystical" feeling within the US, Mexico and Canada. In fact, it feels almost like a different planet from my neck of the woods in Northeastern, Ohio. I went back for a second time a few years ago and my feelings were unchanged. I was so compelled to go back that I even started planning my wedding and honeymoon in Sedona.
One cannot go to Sedona and not hear about the vortexes in the area (unless you're on your honeymoon and remain in your private bungalow). I was even told that Native Americans used the area for vision quests as they believed it to be an area filled with so much energy that one should use it for self-discovery but should never live there full-time. In listening to people in Sedona about the vortexes it sounded a lot like a chapter out of a Carlos Castaneda book - I half expected Don Juan to jump out of some sage brush and teach me to morph into a coyote.

What is a vortex? A vortex, according to Brad Olsen's book entitled Sacred Places Around the World: 108 Destinations, 'Vortexes are subtle earth energy centers located along strong ley lines in various locations around the world.' Vortexes are basically- magnetic energy in motion.

Here is a list of countries around the world purporting possible energy vortexes:
Argentina, Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala,Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Peru, United States, Venezuela,
Algeria, Egypt, Ethiopia, Mali, Mauritania, Senegal, Tunisia,
Burma, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Laos, Nepal, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam,
Andorra, Austria, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Crete, Croatia, Czech Republic,
Denmark, Finland, France, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Malta,
Norway, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Switzerland, United Kingdom,
Iran, Iraq,
Israel, Palestine, Saudi Arabia,

Syria, Turkey

For a detailed list of locations - go to - Sacred Sites

Vortexes seem to be located in areas in which our ancestors built ceremonial mounds or monuments. I suppose they sensed this energy or is the energy a by-product of past events?
Here is what is says on the website of Sedona Vortex Tours:

A vortex is a place of concentrated energy that people can sense. It is usually a result of positioning: Where two or more energy meridians, called "ley lines," intersect on the earth's grid. Many of the sacred temples and cathedrals around the world are built on these natural earth energy centers. People who were guided to put them there, usually just said that the location 'just felt right'. A “man made” vortex site can be created by setting one’s intention… The earth remembers this intention and some of the people who come at a future time may sense that energy.

So what can a vortex do for you? Apparently, it connects you to your higher consciousness, expanding awareness and creativity and possibly having healing effects.

I know for myself that visiting Sedona was a wonderful experience but so are most vacations - they are usually relaxing and since one is far removed from the routine of everyday life they can feel uplifting. I am compelled to go back to Sedona - but is it because of the vortexes? Are these areas really filled with higher energy levels? I feel exhilarated in New York City - is there a vortex there? If anyone has any real life experience with vortexes and there validity - please let me know.



Monday, February 26, 2007

YUBAN COFFEE


A few years ago a friend turned me on to Yuban Coffee. In the past, as a coffee snob, I would not even consider drinking "supermarket" coffee and would go to specialty stores or mail order Green Mountain Coffee. However, to my surprise Yuban was a great tasting coffee at a Maxwell House price. I was completely satisfied drinking Yuban for many years until they stopped selling it in this area. Apparently, I was the only one buying it at the time as the local supermarkets pulled it from their shelves since it wasn't a big seller. At this point I was hooked on Yuban and wrote letters to the company (which I then discovered was Kraft) and letters to the local supermarkets to see if they would consider changing their minds about pulling it from the area. My letters did not work and I resorted to purchasing the coffee in large quantities while visiting other localities that carried it -even while on vacation over 700 miles away from home. Now Yuban is back again in my area and has an organic version and is a corporate supporter of the Rainforest Alliance.
But now I am torn as I love the coffee but wonder if I should support more socially/environmentally responsible coffee companies. Here's some information on Kraft and what a consumer supports if they support Kraft:

Illegal coffee growing threatens wildlife, Kraft major buyer

In a well-investigated and detailed report (pdf) released yesterday, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) revealed that robusta coffee is being illegally grown in southern Sumatra, with most being purchased by large coffee producers such as Kraft and Nestlé.

"Illegally grown coffee is mixed with legally grown coffee beans and sold to such companies as Kraft Foods and Nestlé among other major companies in the U.S. and abroad." -- WWF

The coffee is being grown inside Indonesia's Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park, which has over 300 bird species and is one of the few places where the endangered Sumatran subspecies of tigers, elephants, and rhinos coexist. This park has already lost 30% of its land to illegal agriculture, mainly coffee. WWF found 173 square miles being used for illegal coffee growing, with a yield of nearly 20,000 tons of coffee annually. Wildlife has abandoned these cultivated areas. WWF tracked the illegal coffee from the park through export routes to multinational coffee companies using satellite imaging, interviews with coffee farmers and traders, and trade route monitoring.

The U.S. received 17% of the coffee tainted with illegally grown beans. Illegal beans are sold to local traders, who mix them with legally grown beans which then make their way to exporters. Major international companies purchase beans from exporters, and if they are not conscientious about their supply chain, they may not know they are buying illegal beans. The main buyers are shown in this graph from the report (click to enlarge), with Kraft being the number one buyer.

Wwfgraph1

Exports of robusta beans from Lampung province, where most the park lies, have been steadily increasing, and the top six companies on the graph buy 55% of all Lampung beans. The profits spurring the encroachment into the park are financed by the purchases of these global roasters, and all Lampung beans have a very high probability of being contaminated with illegally grown beans, according to WWF. Talcoa (part of Kraft Foods), Kraft, and Nestlé were the top recipients in 2003-2005; Folgers (Procter & Gamble) and Starbucks received smaller amounts in 2004.

After being contacted by WWF, Kraft and Nestle were among five companies in the early stages of "engaging with WWF" on the problem. Four companies, including ED&F Man, parent company of VOLCAFE (which supplies beans to Nestlé and Maxwell House), denied involvement. Eight other companies did not reply (full list in report).

Remember this is robusta coffee, so you don't have to worry about the Sumatran arabica beans from your favorite specialty roaster. The illegal beans are those used in most supermarket blends. Another reason to not buy these coffees!

Copied from Coffee and Conservation

It is a tough call - Here is what Yuban claims on their website:

Making a difference...is as simple as brewing a delicious cup of Yuban coffee. As the world's largest supporter of Rainforest Alliance Certified™ coffee beans, Yuban helps to protect the environment and support the people and wildlife in coffee-growing regions. So the next time you brew a cup of Yuban coffee, know you're doing something good. Every sip counts.



'Titanic' attack on Resurrection





The Oscar-winning director of "Titanic" is expected to announce in a news conference tomorrow that his next film project is a documentary suggesting Jesus wasn't resurrected, was married to Mary Magdalene and had a son.

James Cameron is producing "The Lost Tomb of Jesus," claiming the discovery of 10 stone coffins in a Jerusalem suburb in 1980 is actually the family crypt of Jesus of Nazareth.

The 90-minute film will be shown on the Discovery Channel at a later date.

The film makes the case that Jesus had a son named Judah with Mary Magdalene.

Prominent Jerusalem archaeologist Amos Kloner is disputing the claims, saying, "It makes a great story for a TV film. But it's impossible. It's nonsense."

Cameron and his director, Simcha Jacobovici, claim also to have DNA evidence to back their story.

Jacobovici is trying not to alienate the faithful, by suggesting the ascension into heaven by Jesus could still have occurred spiritually if not physically.

"People who believe in a physical ascension – that he took his body to heaven – those people will say, 'Wait a minute,'" warns the director.

The news comes a year after the release of "The Da Vinci Code" movie, based on the best-selling novel of 2004 by Dan Brown, both of which also claimed Mary Magdalene was the wife of Jesus.

James Tabor, chairman of the religious studies department at the University of North Carolina who is interviewed throughout the documentary, says it will not be so easy to dismiss this work.

"This is archaeology," he claims. "We've got the casket. We've got the bones. I think we can say, in all probability, Jesus had this son, Judah, presumably through Mary Magdalene."

The coffins reportedly carried the names of Jesua, son of Joseph, Mary, Mary, Mathew, Jofa and Judah, son of Jesua. Some archaeologists who studied the find point out those were common names in Israel 2,000 years ago.

A statistician is brought into the documentary to suggest finding that combination of names in a first century crypt at 600 to 1.

The news conference is schedule to be held in New York and a website has been created to tout the media event. A companion book, "The Jesus Family Tomb," published by Harper-Collins, is set for release this week.


If you'd like to sound off on this issue, please take part in the WorldNetDaily poll.

© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com

Sunday, February 25, 2007

The Air Car

My next vehicle!

Friday, February 23, 2007

Nine Year Anniversary!


Congratulations to me for managing to stay in a relationship for 9 years. Congratulations to my wife for putting up with me for 9 years! She deserves an award or medal of courage and perseverance. According to national statistics, we beat the median of almost 8 years of marriage before ending in divorce! Congratulations to all those other couples out there that have found their "soul mate."
My wife has many reasons to leave me but I can't think of any basis for leaving her - good for me! We know how to fight - which rarely happens but when it does we debate our issues politely and resolve them. Rarely do we bring up past issues.

Here is a cautionary list of the 10 mistakes I have made:

1. During our dating days when I lived in a dorm, I constructed my bed out of two beds and it wasn't extremely sturdy - I stated "You can sit on my bed, you shouldn't break it" - Any women could take offense to that.

2. One morning, while we were still in bed and her hair was a mess -I said "How did Robert Smith from The Cure get into this bed!" - ouch

3. While we were in college I moved my friend into her apartment without really clearing it with her. Consequently, I ended up spending more time visiting with my friend at her apartment than spending time with her.

4. One night she planned a romantic night and made me chocolate covered strawberries, bought champagne and decorated the room with stars and candle light and when I arrived home I told her I wanted to watch Blade Runner instead - she fell asleep during the opening credits.

5. One morning she made me breakfast in bed and I continued to sleep until lunch time.

6. I bought a motorcycle. - I thought it was cool - she didn't!

7. I've only cleaned the bathroom a few times in 9 years.

8. I continued to watch a uneventful baseball game while she was standing next to me in sexy lingerie.

9. A couple years ago - I listened exclusively to Frank Zappa for almost 6 months and proceeded to talk with her everyday about the complexity of his music. - I'm still recovering!

10. I drop everything to play golf and once golfed the whole day of Mother's Day while she prepared dinner for her mother and our daughter!

I'm sure my wife could triple this list. What can I say...I have the next nine years to improve!
And to all the ladies out there that put up with guys like me - Cheers to you!

Happy Anniversary to my wife! I wouldn't want to spend it with anyone else.

What's the #1 reason why your significant other should leave you?

Thursday, February 22, 2007

GLOBAL WARMING


What's up with global warming? I took a daily poll today and 60% of participants think that global warming is a farce. Many people believe that Al Gore's movie, An Inconvenient Truth is more fiction than truth based on inconclusive data. With the world population now an estimated 6,525,170,264, and over 600 million cars in the world notwithstanding the long list of other ways carbon dioxide is emitted into the atmosphere, it seems that we humans may have some impact on our environment.


Burning One Gallon of Gasoline Generates 22 Pounds of Carbon Dioxide

Are we naturally so arrogant that we can't admit that we are responsible for climate change and the thought of giving up our SUVs is too much to ask even if it is for the sake of our children's future? Or is Michael Crichton's book State of Fear, correct in stating that the science behind climate change is ultimately pseudoscience, or is his book the work of fiction as it is listed? More Europeans seems to understand the impact we are having on the environment. Are most Americans in denial? How do you feel about this issue? Should we sit back and wait to see how things pan out or should each and every one of us start conserving?

Meka's Cob Cottage

Alternative homes!

I don't know much about these cob houses, only that they are made of dirt and straw and are environmentally friendly. I read somewhere that you can build them for $11,000. I am wondering how they stand up to the elements - are they practical in different climates? Anyone have any experience in building one of these sweet looking homes?


http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/1107/p02s01-usec.html

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

WRITERS OF LOST (Parody)

Now we finally know how they come up with those twisted and surreal plots. Check out a great website on the theories of LOST at: http://lost-theories.com/

MAGIC HAT


Good company, a #9 and nothing else to do!!! Seven years anxiously awaiting and Magic Hat Beer has finally arrived in Northeastern Ohio! Not sure what took so long but the wait made it even sweeter. Magic Hat Brewing Company is located in South Burlington, Vermont (greatest state in the union - Ohio is 7th) and the makers of par excellence micro-brewed beer. Here's a description of the #9 just to get you thirsty: 'A beer cloaked in secrecy. An ale whose mysteries and unusual palate will swirl across your tongue and ask more questions than it answers. A beer brewed clandestinely and given a name whose meaning is never revealed. Why #9? why, indeed. A sort of dry, crisp, fruity, refreshing, not-quite pale ale. #9 is really impossible to describe because there's never been anything quite like it.' Now you see what I'm talking about but you have to taste one to know why I am even posting this on my blog. I would like to thank the beer rep who suggested putting this on-tap at two local establishments. Keep it coming and let my wife know that I won't be home for a while.

Any micro-brews that you love? - post comment.

Magic Hat Brewing Company

Monday, February 19, 2007

COLORFUL BUILDINGS NEAR MOSCOW




Why can't we do something like this in Cleveland, Ohio? Cleveland is similar to Moscow from what I understand. It might help with the overall morale of the city.

Check out other pictures at:
http://sturman.livejournal.com/271320.html

Why Britney Shaved Her Head!


Britney Spears did not shave her head because she was symbolically reborn and starting fresh. Britney is not making a dramatic musical shift inspired by Sinead, embracing feminism and singing angry and intense songs instead of the mainstream garbage she put out in the past. Britney is not becoming a Buddhist monk. Britney is not undergoing cancer treatment.
The real reason Britney shaved her head according to informed sources is that she had head lice - much like Sigourney Weaver in Aliens. Due to excessive partying, rubbing up with the likes of anyone who could stand hanging with her and being malnourished -she contracted the Pediculus humanus capitis and the best way to rid yourself of these little buggers is to rid yourself of your hair. The other theory is that she has a staring role in the next season of Prison Break.

Sunday, February 18, 2007

NATURAL MORPHINE


Oh to just be content...to sit and watch the waves upon the beach or the snow falling softly to the ground. How often do these moments spring forth in our lives? What is it that gives us a sense of completeness and connectedness to something greater? Those moments when whatever we are doing is all we need...for a time we are free from hunger, thirst, and all physical and emotional pain washes away and our state of consciousness seems to be divinely inspired. Philosophers have spoken of this for centuries and athletes term this as being in the "zone." I have felt this while snowboarding, sailing, playing golf and spending time in good conversation. We all have these moments and long to have them again. I wonder what flood of chemicals are occurring in my brain at these moments- is it similar to a dopamine release when ingesting morphine or other opiates? The experience is what poems and any great works of art are made of - something that only the creative of minds can put into words or color. I enjoy the surprise of these moments as they do not always occur when doing the activities I love. It's as if everything has to be in order for these moments to occur - I know how to increase the likelihood of their occurrence but I can never force it to happen. I can complete a round of golf every weekend for the next season and never get into the zone and then when I least expect it everything falls into place and I have that quietude, that connection, that visualized shot that works as planned and overall that sense of oneness with everything. Was it the variety of foods I consumed at lunchtime? Or the mix of chemicals I inadvertently put into my body? How did I get there and how can I get back sometime soon? More importantly, how can I control this and bring it to me when I need it most? Or would it be less euphoric if it wasn't a spontaneous event? Until the next time...

THE SECRET


I watched The Secret not long ago and found it to be interesting and worthwhile when it comes to taking responsibility for our thoughts and gaining a better understanding of whether our thoughts are in line with our intentions and goals in life. Do we have internal conflicts that we may not be aware of? Are we always wishing for money because we feel we will never have enough and in turn sending out the forever wishing but never achieving manifestation? I like the idea of moving away from the external locus of control to an internal realization that we can accomplish and obtain whatever we focus on. However, I started thinking about my day job working with homeless individuals - I believe that homelessness exists and is a real problem in this country and I focus a lot of my attention on the issue. My reality of the issue has expanded and prior to working in this field, I knew nothing about the number of homeless individuals around me in my community. So, as this has become a real issue in my life - I have to ask- Are my coworkers and I creating more homelessness by focusing intently on the issue? A strange question to ask indeed - yet I wonder if we focused on believing that homelessness will end or is not a great problem -would the issue lessen over time? When we add more police to our streets, do we create more criminals? When we fight the war on drugs, are we creating more drugs coming into the country? If what we focus on becomes our reality, are these things manifesting themselves in our world?

The laws of attraction makes sense on many levels. I know that there are certain things that I expect and those things seem to manifest in my life. Nevertheless, other things such as believing that I will eventually out-grow my asthma seems out of reach. I can believe each and every day and know that it's working and then I have an attack and it is reinforced within me again that I will forever suffer from this malady. What do we have the control over to change? I can believe in happiness and peace for my family but when some natural force destroys my house - did I somehow create this? Did innocent families in Baghdad bring the war to their communities because of the laws of attraction?
I grew up in an area with very little criminal activity, got used to never locking my car, and always left my keys in my car. When I moved around the county because of conditioning, I continued to leave my keys in my car not thinking much about it being stolen. Friends were dumbfounded by this behavior and repeated told me my car would be stolen. I never believed them and continued to leave my keys in my car on most occasions and the only car that was ever stolen from me was the car that was locked, and I still have the keys. Therefore, perhaps our beliefs reinforce what happens to us and can influence our reality. But we can't go so far as to say that the child that was kidnapped was sending out this attraction, however, it's possible to believe that the mother who believes that the world is a more dangerous than when she was a child is going to be living in a scarier world and be more fearful because she has created this idea in her mind and reinforcing it by watching the news each night.

Anyone have more congruent thoughts on the laws of attraction?- or any real life experiences on using the laws of attraction feel free to comment.

Friday, February 16, 2007

SECOND LIFE



I am sure everyone knows about Second Life by now. But in case you haven't - it's a virtual world in which you design your own person, meet other people, get a job, purchase land, build things, have sex and do just about everything you can do in the real world only through your computer. It is reminiscent of SIMS but better graphics and one is capable of doing so much more. One of the nice aspects of Second Life is you are able to fly if you want to get somewhere fast. Another piece of this "game" is you are able to make real money and spend money. The Linden dollar can be converted to US currency and people are supplementing their income in their "second life" and some have quit their day jobs altogether. It is possible to spend money on real estate that doesn't really exist and make money selling items you have made in this virtual world. I just had to check it out. I found it to be quite fascinating and met people from all over the world. I went to great areas had drinks, good conversation and even checked out some of the seedy areas. After three days in this world - I was beginning to understand how compelling it could be - I could be everything that I am not in this world. I made my avatar muscular and attractive and decided that I could be bold and Type A - acting in ways that I don't feel comfortable doing in this world. However, after pulling my undernourished, red eyed, overstimulated physical body away from the computer and discovering that my first life was suffering and responsibilities skirted - I pulled the plug and erased it from my computer.

I wonder what the future holds for us? The experience of Second Life was like some sort of matrix and I could see how it could end up consuming much of my time. The virtual world is like simulated Prozac or a form of escapism that some us can't reach in this world. It gives us instant control and pulls you in right away with the allure of being able to fly and creating your own character. Do we retard our progress in this world by spending time in the virtual world or can it be part and parcel to our emotional/spiritual growth? I suppose it is no different than other computer games or perhaps similar to the internet and blogs in general. You can make connections with others from around the world but what happens when we spend 6 to 8 hours a day in the virtual world? What will become of the real world? Will I someday be able to go on a date with my wife on some tropical island without leaving our house? Just hook me up to an IV and plug my brain in...Any thoughts?

Check out Second Life if you haven't already -http://secondlife.com/ - it's free unless you want to join - Make sure you remember to eat, shower, talk to spouse/kids/friends and go to work!

FREECYCLE


Check out this very cool website for finding free items that you may need or giving away stuff that is cluttering up your house! It is the free version of EBAY.

The Freecycle Network™ is made up of many individual groups across the globe. It's a grassroots and entirely nonprofit movement of people who are giving (& getting) stuff for free in their own towns. Each local group is moderated by a local volunteer (them's good people). Membership is free. To sign up, find your community by clicking on the region on the left. You may then go directly to your local group by clicking on "Go To" or you may immediately joining by clicking on "Join." It will generate an automatic e-mail which, when sent, will sign you up for the local group and send you a response with instructions on how it works. Can't find a group near you? You might want to consider starting one (click on "Start a Group" for instructions). Have fun!

The Freecycle Network was started in May 2003 to promote waste reduction in Tucson's downtown and help save desert landscape from being taken over by landfills. The Network provides individuals and non-profits an electronic forum to "recycle" unwanted items. One person's trash can truly be another's treasure!

http://www.freecycle.org