Category Archives: Social Science

Random Internet Observations

Dooce is back. Her most recent How to Annoy Me post made me laugh out loud.

Also, I didn’t know before today that the term dooced is in the Urban Dictionary. Sometimes I wish I were that popular, but then again, it would mean having to read and manage more email. It’s too pretty here to do that.

Though the same can’t be said of Craig Newmark, founder of Craigslist. According the a New York Times article, he does not get out much. It has been four years since Mr. Newmark, 51, took a day off from sitting at his computer admonishing spammers, scammers, ne’er-do-wells, meanies and others who would demean or pollute the community that bears his name. This innovative form of advertising and sharing information remains free of banner ads, popups, registration forms, and fees (except to employers). He also intends to keep it simple and has not been lured to sell out for lucre.

And today is Google‘s sixth birthday. I like Google for many reasons, such as their innovative search development (images, news, Froogle), the fact that they out-perform all other search engines I’ve ever used, and their really nifty doodles.

Who, Indeed?

An incisive polemic from a unique perspective:

Look at the shit that’s passed off as food these days. Look at the sugar-soaked, over-fatted (or defatted), over-preserved, artificial, neonized, irradiated, modified, processed, pesticide-smeared crap that’s fed to children. Look at the non-food that wrapped and packaged and stamped with a decade-long ‘sell-by’ date. Look at the tallow-injected, deep-fried, fortified, refined and shrink-wrapped products in our supermarkets. Who would eat this?

Nomen est Numen

Excellent question. Click on the link to read more.

How To Eat Normally

God must have loved calories… he made so many of them.

–from a magnet on my refrigerator

I love to eat — I really enjoy the experience. As I get older, my body is slowing down, and the weight has crept up. It’s not just age; inactivity is a significant factor too. In my youth I flirted with bulimia, bingeing, overexercising, using laxatives, starving myself. This, fortunately, was a short-lived experience that did not hurtle me into a dangerous disorder.

I look at photos of myself 10 and 20 years ago and think, “If only I could have seen then that I really was a normal weight…” Recently, I was referred by Siona to explore a site called Normal Eating. I highly recommend it as a sane approach to understanding food, emotions, and one’s body. One can hope to enjoy many of those calories God made and stop obsessing over each one.

The Advantages Of Living With A Geek (If You Know What To Value)

More from The Geek Handbook:

3.2.4 Eating Out With Your Geek Part I

Occasionally you may attempt to take your geek off-site for a dining experience. A meal off the grid presents several challenges. Try incorporating your geek’s surfing skills into the planning. Say to your geek, “I wonder if there is a Moroccan restaurant near the movie theater, with parking, and entrees between twelve and fifteen dollars?” Your geek will happily hunt down this information for you on various city guides and search engines, while the phone books of your father’s generation sit sullenly. Warning: this option does limit you to eating at places in the search engines, but at least you’re getting out of the house.

3.2.4 Eating Out With Your Geek Part II

Ready to go? Your geek will arm himself with a palmtop, cellphone, GPS, beeper, and anything else he can think of. Your nice meal at a local bistro has turned into an Apollo mission. There are two ways to confront this. One is to go to a geek-themed restaurant which provides an arcade or other stimulating environment. He won’t need his silicon security blanket if you give him a roll of quarters. The other strategy is to appeal to your geek’s rebel side. There is a moment in many geek narratives where the hero is required to go forth with no technology to help him. Remember, the Federation always ultimately beat the Borg with nothing but their human ingenuity even when all shields were down. Carelessly say to your geek that you know some programmers need those silly accouterments, but you know that your geek is so efficient that they aren’t necessary. Besides, surely if the server goes down, either the company will send out a SWAT team for him, or he will just know. It is like a mother hearing her baby cry.

Dax’s Case: Issues Of Living And Dying

I wrote an essay in 1998 for one of my graduate classes that dealt with legal and ethical issues in my profession. At the time I was battling an episode of major depression which was made more acute that year by: a significant loss, and an unwisely created emotional attachment to someone completely unavailable as I grieved that loss.

I’m pondering issues of life and death again, in part because my fiancé’s father is gravely ill, and also because transitions of any kind — even good ones, such as my move — bring reminders of the ultimate passage we humans face. I’m applying to volunteer at The Centre for Living With Dying. Answering the application questions reminded me that I’d written a paper on the topic. Since a blog is the writer’s forum for inflicting expounding one’s views, I’m laying it out here. It’s very long (don’t say I didn’t warn you). I’m also closing comments due to the personal nature of this essay. Comments can be emailed to me directly. Without further ado…
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The Way Of Transformation

The way of transformation lies in surrendering our illusions of control and learning to live with uncertainty. It means taking pleasure in our fundamental questions about life rather than rushing toward simplistic answers. It means we strive not just to understand but to embody our understanding. The way of transformation requires a special kind of toughness and willingness to experience emotional intensity. It requires humility and a foolishness born of the desire to live and love with abandon.

And the payoff? The payoff is the ecstasy that comes through seeing, with openheartedness, things as they are, and allowing feeling, sensation and love to flow through us. Ecstasy is a word we can hardly use without conjuring thoughts of drug use, madness, or inability to function. But when I speak of ecstasy, I am not talking about some dangerous state where we are out of control of our actions or out of touch with reality. (The only threat that ecstasy poses is that it breaks down our illusions of separateness and it reveals the madness of heartless competition and greed). Instead, it is an intense joy available to most everyone. The mystics say it is our essential nature, our natural state. Once we open ourselves to the ecstatic flow of feeling and energy in our bodies, we are less bound to old ideas about the kinds of protections that are needed to live in this world. Our own ability to open and connect becomes a source of power in times of conflict or adversity.

–Kenneth Robinson, Alaya Process facilitator

You can also read an essay he wrote reflecting on his experience with yoga and healing here. I miss working with him and his co-facilitators. I miss the group. But hey, I’m in California. This place, if nothing else, is rich with venues for growth. I’ve only just arrived. Patience. In time, I’ll see more. (Patience is one of my developing traits!)

A Gorgeous Death

I love reading Kat’s Paws. She writes poetic nuggets, such as:

It’s cool enough for pants today. That fall chill is nosing it’s way in. Just slightly. Enough to let you know that, hey, underneath all this greenery there’s a gorgeous death about to occur. The fireworks of fall leaves. The send-off of warmth.

Fall is my absolute favorite time of year. Every year since leaving, I become wistful for Nature’s northeast extravaganza. There’s also something compelling about the “gorgeous death” concept. Culturally we aren’t comfortable with death. It’s difficult enough to die with dignity here. What would a gorgeous death be like?

Instilling Religious Values In Children

I’ve been watching a number of very religious parents attempting to instill proper religious attitudes in their children. I know the parents’ motives are sincere, but let’s get real.  You can’t just tell children never to be angry and expect they will grow up to be loving persons. You can’t tell children they always have to share, to give up personal space and boundaries, to put everybody else’s needs before their own, and then expect them to grow up with wide-open hearts.  It just won’t happen — not on the inside.

You can teach children to behave somewhat ethically by grounding them in a lot of rules and regulations that control how they act in specific situations.  Even when it comes about by suppressing all their inner nasty, wicked thoughts and resentments, children reared this way do end up functioning as responsible and socially moral adults. I just wish you could see the emotional junk buried beneath that outer shell of righteous goodness.

It seems a lot more sane to acknowledge and accept honest feelings — then take a look afterward at options, at acceptable ways in which the child can respond.  How wonderful if we could teach children to be personally responsible for their social interactions, and free them up so they could use religion as a source of comfort and inspiration.

The Skeptical Mystic

I agree wholeheartedly, and I couldn’t have said it better. (The author left a comment on a recent post, and I’m very excited to have found her blog. It looks juicy!)

Mirror, Mirror On The Wall

Mirrors Can Make Women Feel Worse About Working Out:

A study published in Health Psychology found that sedentary women who exercised in front of a mirror for 20 minutes felt less energized, less relaxed and less positive and upbeat than women who performed their workout without a mirror.

Women who exercised without the mirror also reported that they were less physically exhausted at the end of their workout, while those with a mirror reported no change in their exhaustion level.

The findings could have implications for encouraging physical activity among sedentary women, especially since the standard guidelines for exercise promotion suggest that workout rooms have mirrors on at least two of four walls.

As such, the recommended practice of placing mirrors in exercise centers may need to be reconsidered, especially in centers that are trying to attract exercise initiates, say Kathleen A. Martin Ginis, Ph.D., of McMaster University and colleagues.

Apparently the research also found that women with good body image felt negative effects in the same environment. That’s why I go to Curves.

[via Siona]

New Month, New Friend, New Fun

Rabbit, rabbit! As a girl, I said this first thing on the first day of the month to ensure good luck. It was more for fun than anything. I suppose I believed in that superstition about as much as I attested to Santa’s existence until I outgrew magical thinking.

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So it’s the first of a new month. September is a time of beginning for me. I celebrate a private new year on September 6. No, it’s not my birthday. It’s a date of reclamation, a way of honoring myself on the anniversary of my assault. That date used to bring grief, and I focused on the damage it wrought. A colleague in graduate school once said, “You know, Kathryn, you need to stop celebrating this negative anniversary.” He was right. So I decided to make the day special for myself. I journal about my strengths and blessings, do a twelve-month tarot reading to establish themes for the next year, treat myself to something nice, and pamper my body. The last bit is very important. My body is a sacred place, though I’m the first to admit that I’m not perfectly consistent in my treatment of it as such. After the rape, though, I disconnected from my body for several years. One of my acts of tenderness toward myself in recovery was to get weekly massages (from an intern, since I was a student at the time) for a year. I sought a male massage therapist so I could reintroduce myself to safe touch from a man. It was integral to my process. Since I’m new here, I don’t know of any massage therapists; otherwise I’d probably get one.

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I’m feeling better today. Siona can take credit for contributing to my improved mood. We had a wonderful talk. Two hours passed seamlessly. I loved talking with her; I experienced the mental/emotional connection that is so essential in my life. I felt at home with her and in the cafe, Mission City Coffee Roasting, which has wi-fi (woo hoo!) too. She also gave me ideas, lots of ideas, of places to explore.

One of those places was the San Jose Library, specifically the MLK branch. Oh my! It’s huge. Because it’s part of the San Jose University system, it offers a panoply of services. There’s a café, a children’s center, literacy center, and bookstore. Then there is an education resource center, reference and technology areas, lecture rooms and computer labs. The library has 1.5 million holdings, 400 public access computers, and 500 laptop ports. My only lament is that parking is scarce and not cheap.

Another showcase library that’s basically in my back yard is the Santa Clara City Library. The new building opened in April, I heard. It’s 80,000 square feet of state-of-the-art design. They offer much of the same as the SJ library on a smaller scale. It was incredibly busy the day I went.

So I have two brand new library cards, which I shall use liberally. Why am I so excited? Well, I worked at the Syracuse University Library for ten years. When I was little, I played pretend librarian. In my twenties I labeled the spines of my books and organized the fiction by author’s last name and non-fiction by subject. These days I track my 698 book library with Books for MacOS X, a nifty free program by a devoted Apple user. Yes, I am a library geek. And Siona shares my passion for libraries as well as other things.

Thus begins a new month. It’s good, very good.

Ebb And Flow

Human interaction follows the basic rhythm of moving toward, then moving away, like ocean waves against the shore. Feeling at ease with this pattern is part of the art of living.

It is important to learn that one can sustain a loss and endure. Able to move apart as well as to come together, individuals can free themselves from a crippling need which makes them hang on too cruelly here, avoid becoming reinvolved there. Getting and losing are part of the same process: one is its beginning, the other its end. But they follow one another in circular, not linear, fashion. We move toward one another, then apart, then toward, then apart…. The process, to and fro, is always changing, yet it is always the same.

Each leave-taking underscores our own limitedness and mortality. We learn that we cannot control others as we might wish. We cannot control fate. We are, and we are not, masters of our destinies. We move, now with others, now alone, now happily, now sadly, in a kinetic and continuous dance whose end comes only with our own, final separation from life itself. Understanding these rhythms of human relatedness will turn unavoidable separations into chances to grasp further the condition of our human being-in-the-world.

–Excerpted from “Separation anxiety…” by Michael L. Glenn, M.D., in the American Journal of Psychotherapy 25, 1971, 437-446.

When I moved from Syracuse to Austin in 1994, I experienced a tsunami-shift in rhythm. I was eager to move into a new life. Yet I remember how surreal it felt at times to be shopping for groceries, filling my car up, or running an errand, aware of how very alone I was — a stranger among thousands. (I came from a much smaller city that I’d lived in for 31 years.)

There were times in those first years that I was pierced with loneliness. I had friends, but most of them were married and had children, so I rarely had someone just to “pal around” with. Structured activities at church also didn’t provide the sustained emotional connection I desired. It didn’t help that I was attempting to follow a spiritual path that I was inherently incompatible with; all my efforts to create intimate friendships in that context were destined to be short lived because I wasn’t truly being myself. Also, during those years I struggled with depression, the repercussions of being raped, and the loss of my feline companion, in whom I’d poured all my connective energy.

To console myself through that era, I symbolized love as an ocean — immense, unceasing. The times I felt lonely I cast as low tide; I would remind myself the dry spell was temporary, that another time would come when I would feel flooded with connection. I was always loved. I just might not always feel it. That concept didn’t necessarily make me feel better quickly, but it did help me as I learned how to be alone, how to become my own best friend. The above quote was given to me by my therapist when I was leaving group and graduating from my master’s program. I found it as I unpacked last week. How timely!

Yesterday and today I find myself feeling sad and often teary. I don’t miss my former house, nor Austin particularly. (Well, I do a little, but not the heat!) I miss my friends and family there. I miss the easy companionship of getting together. I miss the familiarity with places, events, and venues; I knew my way around. After about five years there, I began running into acquaintances and friends all over the city, and this increased the longer I lived there. I was home.

Santa Clara has not yet become home. I know in time it will. What feels similar to the last move is a sense of starting over professionally. Then I had a B.A. but wasn’t sure what I could do with it (and I was quite ready to work someplace other than a library, my career of ten years). Now I have a master’s and a counseling license that doesn’t transfer, and again I’m not certain what direction to head in. This time, fortunately, there is no economic pressure on me to figure it out right away.

I’m meeting Siona for coffee today, and given what I know of myself and her, I think we will enjoy each other. It’s just that right now I’m experiencing the unique spiritual space of ending and beginning, which naturally brings to surface a variety of emotions. Accepting this, allowing myself to feel without judgment, giving the process its due — this is learning to understand my human being-in-the-world.

She Took Me Gently

I have loved in life and I have been loved.
I have drunk the bowl of poison from the hands of love as nectar,
and have been raised above life’s joy and sorrow.

My heart, aflame in love, set afire every heart that came in touch with it.

My heart has been rent and joined again;
My heart has been broken and again made whole;
My heart has been wounded and healed again;
A thousand deaths my heart has died, and thanks be to love, it lives yet.

I went through hell and saw there love’s raging fire,
and I entered heaven illumined with the light of love.
I wept in love and made all weep with me;
I mourned in love and pierced the hearts of men;

And when my fiery glance fell on the rocks, the rocks burst forth as volcanoes.
The whole world sank in the flood caused by my one tear;
With my deep sigh the earth trembled,
and when I cried aloud the name of my beloved,
I shook the throne of God in heaven.

I bowed my head low in humility,
and on my knees I begged of love,
“Disclose to me, I pray thee, O love, thy secret.”

She took me gently by my arms and lifted me above the earth,
and spoke softly in my ear,
“My dear one, thou thyself art love, art lover,
and thyself art the beloved whom thou hast adored.”

–The Dance of the Soul Vadan, Alankaras
Hazrat Pir-o-Murshid ‘Inayat Khan

An Anniversary

It slipped past me. Yesterday was the first anniversary of this blog. It’s transformed a bit over time, focusing a bit more on what interests me personally and not as much a series of links to mental health sites and articles. I know I’ve garnered a few dedicated readers, and I thank you for stopping by to see what’s popped out of my psyche on any given day. I hope you’ve enjoyed this as much as I have. Here’s to another year!

It’s A Style Statement

In our supposedly nonjudgmental, acceptance-valuing culture, control-freak style mavens are all over TV, telling people what’s wrong with them, and audiences eat it up. What gladiators were to ancient Rome, makeovers are to us today: bloody spectacles for the masses to watch the abject fight for their lives. The slaves of yore are now women hobbled by poor access to cosmetic surgery and decent haircuts. Seeing life as a big style problem to be solved by style solutions is no longer an occupational hazard restricted to fashionistas, drag queens and neurotics.

–Rhonda Lieberman, How I Picked My Shrink