check out my latest tumblr post about creating a shovel list.
because bucket lists are dumb.
(tumblr is the way of the future, sorry blogspot. for now.)
Wednesday, August 3, 2011
Saturday, March 19, 2011
unfinished no.4 & SUPERMOON
i once read that there's no gravity at the center of the earth
so i'm going to grab my shovel and dig until i hit the core and
pretend i'm in outer space, flying without falling and floating
without fading away
without fading away
until the lava gets too hot and a million tiny volcanoes push me
back up
back up
"We climbed, he first and I behind, until,
Gustave Dore's illustration of this canto in Inferno |
Sunday, February 27, 2011
the wave world
so i've been really into out-there ideas lately, probably because i read the time traveler's wife. which by the way is definitely one of the most well-written books ever written. ever. written. anyway, so i had this idea of time traveling and genetic anomalies in my head already, when i decided to write my psychology paper about near-death experiences. i thought that i would just read about how it's mostly a hoax and then write a paper about how they're not hoaxes, just to help the t.a. grading 135 papers to not want to jump off a high building for a little while.
so i was reading all about near-death experiences and the experiencers, about what they see and how they feel coming back into life. and i realized that they aren't hoaxes, but real, spiritual (or at least non-physical) experiences. i immersed myself in it for a huge chunk of my sunday last week, ignoring tons of hockey games and my growing to do list. but it was so worth it.
there is this growing subfield in psychology that you could call quantum mechanics psychology, if you really wanted to give it a name. these scientists/psychologists are applying the infinitely complex ideas of quantum physics to the human mind and human existence in general. i'm no physicist, and if i knew any physicists i would make fun of them for choosing such outrageous careers. but the general idea is that human consciousness has both the dimensions of particles, of this physical and living world we know, and of waves, of the higher quantum world. these two dimensions are always present at the same time. the wave world is a space where the past, present, and future exist all at all times. so, every human being is connected to this wave-field dimension while we're alive in this physical world.
in terms of death and near-death experiences, this means that really, we never die. it doesn't matter your religious views, because even if you're some doubting, existentialist snob, here is a solid scientific theory for you. the fear of death is a universal fear, across all cultures and throughout history. it's why people (me included) choose to believe in life beyond death and the impossibility that we. just. die. but with this wave world idea, our consciousness lives on beyond our physical life and truly, we never die. american statesman daniel webster's last words were, "i still live. pretty." in they beyondworld, truly we live on.
but on a less extreme level, this whole wave world idea is also important to our lives right now. we aren't just individuals living separate and unconnected lives. this idea argues that we are in fact connected on a completely spiritual level, in the eternal collective conscious of every human (and animal?) that has ever lived and will ever live. our consciousness lives outside of us and extends beyond our life. as unsettling as this idea might be, it should be a endlessly hopeful comfort, because we are not alone. this united, indestructible, eternal collection of consciousness unites us all and should make us realize that we are all in this together. and this idea is also an endlessly inspiring force to live by, to wake up each day and know that we are part of the world on a deeper, higher level.
if this theory is true, or more importantly, if we choose to believe in it, maybe we wouldn't be afraid of helping others anymore. or maybe we would not be so aimless and unsettled. and maybe, we wouldn't be afraid of letting go or dying. and, even more important, maybe we wouldn't be afraid to truly live and be alive. to believe in the inifinitepossibilityness of the world and of our own super powers.
ideas like this wave world theory help us understand the grand mystery of what it means to live, and launch us endlessly into an exploration of what lies beyond. to be taken out of our ordinary rituals and routines, even if just for the amount of time it takes to read this blog, is essential to expanding our understanding of ourselves and the grander meaning, whatever that may be. we might not be able to time travel or be kid wizards who save the world, but we can make positive changes and work hard to make the world a better place, little by little. and the fact that we are all so connected in this wave world only fuels this conviction in the power of hope and empathy. why not bring the connectedness down to this world? in the words of philosopher pierre teilhard de chardin, "we are not human beings having a spiritual experience, we are spiritual beings having a human experience."
and to test out my theory that people really only read things if there are pictures: here's a picture from natgeo, of a place in norway called "the world's end." which is probably the coolest name for a place ever. and it looks like a really cool place too. plus it seemed kind of related to the wave world idea.
so i was reading all about near-death experiences and the experiencers, about what they see and how they feel coming back into life. and i realized that they aren't hoaxes, but real, spiritual (or at least non-physical) experiences. i immersed myself in it for a huge chunk of my sunday last week, ignoring tons of hockey games and my growing to do list. but it was so worth it.
there is this growing subfield in psychology that you could call quantum mechanics psychology, if you really wanted to give it a name. these scientists/psychologists are applying the infinitely complex ideas of quantum physics to the human mind and human existence in general. i'm no physicist, and if i knew any physicists i would make fun of them for choosing such outrageous careers. but the general idea is that human consciousness has both the dimensions of particles, of this physical and living world we know, and of waves, of the higher quantum world. these two dimensions are always present at the same time. the wave world is a space where the past, present, and future exist all at all times. so, every human being is connected to this wave-field dimension while we're alive in this physical world.
in terms of death and near-death experiences, this means that really, we never die. it doesn't matter your religious views, because even if you're some doubting, existentialist snob, here is a solid scientific theory for you. the fear of death is a universal fear, across all cultures and throughout history. it's why people (me included) choose to believe in life beyond death and the impossibility that we. just. die. but with this wave world idea, our consciousness lives on beyond our physical life and truly, we never die. american statesman daniel webster's last words were, "i still live. pretty." in they beyondworld, truly we live on.
but on a less extreme level, this whole wave world idea is also important to our lives right now. we aren't just individuals living separate and unconnected lives. this idea argues that we are in fact connected on a completely spiritual level, in the eternal collective conscious of every human (and animal?) that has ever lived and will ever live. our consciousness lives outside of us and extends beyond our life. as unsettling as this idea might be, it should be a endlessly hopeful comfort, because we are not alone. this united, indestructible, eternal collection of consciousness unites us all and should make us realize that we are all in this together. and this idea is also an endlessly inspiring force to live by, to wake up each day and know that we are part of the world on a deeper, higher level.
if this theory is true, or more importantly, if we choose to believe in it, maybe we wouldn't be afraid of helping others anymore. or maybe we would not be so aimless and unsettled. and maybe, we wouldn't be afraid of letting go or dying. and, even more important, maybe we wouldn't be afraid to truly live and be alive. to believe in the inifinitepossibilityness of the world and of our own super powers.
ideas like this wave world theory help us understand the grand mystery of what it means to live, and launch us endlessly into an exploration of what lies beyond. to be taken out of our ordinary rituals and routines, even if just for the amount of time it takes to read this blog, is essential to expanding our understanding of ourselves and the grander meaning, whatever that may be. we might not be able to time travel or be kid wizards who save the world, but we can make positive changes and work hard to make the world a better place, little by little. and the fact that we are all so connected in this wave world only fuels this conviction in the power of hope and empathy. why not bring the connectedness down to this world? in the words of philosopher pierre teilhard de chardin, "we are not human beings having a spiritual experience, we are spiritual beings having a human experience."
and to test out my theory that people really only read things if there are pictures: here's a picture from natgeo, of a place in norway called "the world's end." which is probably the coolest name for a place ever. and it looks like a really cool place too. plus it seemed kind of related to the wave world idea.
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
sandcastle shovel: unfinished no.3
sam dug through days and nights and oceans and centuries of human life and the age of dinosaurs and reached the center of the earth with his sandcastle shovel after eighty-eight years.
this will show them, he said out loud as he smiled. this will show them that i can do it.
he gazed for a while at the hot, pulsating core, absorbed in the regular rhythm of the earth. after an hour, or a year, or a decade, he picked up his sand castle shovel, turned his back on the magma and the gold and the dinosaur bones, and began to climb back up through the hole to his backyard.
___________________________________________
i saw this awesome video on scott west's blog the other day. (scott west is an artist from minnesota, also one of the live painters for cloud cult.) it will make you a better person if you watch it. also, the music is great (by a band called gungor, actually based in denver). also, the story behind the video is great. and so is the cineatography and everything. just overall a great video. check it out --> here!
challenge to make the world better: learn to draw a sailboat. like this one:
and then draw sailboats all over the place. like on tax returns and credit applications and phone message pads and shopping lists and tests and everything. because seeing a sailboat makes being an adult with capital R responsibilities a lot easier. it'll definitely make your day, and it'll make all the accountants and police officers and landlords and electricians you give all your adult documents to happy, too. (human points: 13. because sailboats are the best.)
boxes of cheerios: five.
this will show them, he said out loud as he smiled. this will show them that i can do it.
he gazed for a while at the hot, pulsating core, absorbed in the regular rhythm of the earth. after an hour, or a year, or a decade, he picked up his sand castle shovel, turned his back on the magma and the gold and the dinosaur bones, and began to climb back up through the hole to his backyard.
___________________________________________
i saw this awesome video on scott west's blog the other day. (scott west is an artist from minnesota, also one of the live painters for cloud cult.) it will make you a better person if you watch it. also, the music is great (by a band called gungor, actually based in denver). also, the story behind the video is great. and so is the cineatography and everything. just overall a great video. check it out --> here!
challenge to make the world better: learn to draw a sailboat. like this one:
and then draw sailboats all over the place. like on tax returns and credit applications and phone message pads and shopping lists and tests and everything. because seeing a sailboat makes being an adult with capital R responsibilities a lot easier. it'll definitely make your day, and it'll make all the accountants and police officers and landlords and electricians you give all your adult documents to happy, too. (human points: 13. because sailboats are the best.)
boxes of cheerios: five.
Friday, January 21, 2011
sailboats are great! (unfinished no.2)
unfinished no.2
charlie wanted to sail since the first day he saw the sea
he ate his spinach and drank his chocolate milk
so he could grow big and strong like all the sailors he saw
he built a blue sailboat out of popsicle sticks and
bark from tough and tall trees
and sewed a patchwork sail from weathered tee shirt scraps and
lonely yellow rain jackets
he packed his blue backpack full of cookies and crayons
and set sail into the early morning sunrise
he sailed and explored and adventured across days and years and
seasons, ages and eras and epochs of traveling time
and through rain and mist and sun showers and storms
that howled like monsters in the nightlightless dark
the cottonball clouds and glowinthedark stars kept him company
and he drew crayon kingdoms to remember all he'd seen
the castles and the rainforests and the deserts, and
the cliffs and the icebergs and the tiny towns
one night the sunset glowed roseindigoblue on the horizon and
charlie yawned as his sleepy eyes saw lights and land ahead
he knew he was home because of the way the little houses smiled all around
and because his little brown dog waited waggingly for him on the dock
he jumped from his blue boat and ran up the hill to his house and
found hot soup and a bowl of chocolate ice cream waiting for him
______________________________________________________________
challenge to make the world better: go outside and shovel someone's driveway for them. but don't wear all black and be super creepy about it. because then you might end up in the back of a police car. (human points, if you don't end up in jail: ten.) alternative: if you're at starbucks, buy a big hot chocolate and give it to the homeless person outside. because chances are, there's a homeless person outside. (human points: twelve).*
*human points may seem like arbitrary numbers. that's probably because they are. but wait, here's a scale:
-->1-10: you're being a good human being.
-->11-20: you're literally made of awesome.
-->21-30: you are out of this world good at being human.
--> anything above 31: either you're mother theresa, or you cheated.
boxes of honey nut cheerios: three.
charlie wanted to sail since the first day he saw the sea
he ate his spinach and drank his chocolate milk
so he could grow big and strong like all the sailors he saw
he built a blue sailboat out of popsicle sticks and
bark from tough and tall trees
and sewed a patchwork sail from weathered tee shirt scraps and
lonely yellow rain jackets
he packed his blue backpack full of cookies and crayons
and set sail into the early morning sunrise
he sailed and explored and adventured across days and years and
seasons, ages and eras and epochs of traveling time
and through rain and mist and sun showers and storms
that howled like monsters in the nightlightless dark
the cottonball clouds and glowinthedark stars kept him company
and he drew crayon kingdoms to remember all he'd seen
the castles and the rainforests and the deserts, and
the cliffs and the icebergs and the tiny towns
one night the sunset glowed roseindigoblue on the horizon and
charlie yawned as his sleepy eyes saw lights and land ahead
he knew he was home because of the way the little houses smiled all around
and because his little brown dog waited waggingly for him on the dock
he jumped from his blue boat and ran up the hill to his house and
found hot soup and a bowl of chocolate ice cream waiting for him
______________________________________________________________
challenge to make the world better: go outside and shovel someone's driveway for them. but don't wear all black and be super creepy about it. because then you might end up in the back of a police car. (human points, if you don't end up in jail: ten.) alternative: if you're at starbucks, buy a big hot chocolate and give it to the homeless person outside. because chances are, there's a homeless person outside. (human points: twelve).*
*human points may seem like arbitrary numbers. that's probably because they are. but wait, here's a scale:
-->1-10: you're being a good human being.
-->11-20: you're literally made of awesome.
-->21-30: you are out of this world good at being human.
--> anything above 31: either you're mother theresa, or you cheated.
boxes of honey nut cheerios: three.
Monday, January 17, 2011
unfinished no.1
when you're five
you believe you're invincible
(because you are)
you believe you can move the clouds
by just asking nicely
you know that home is wherever your mom and dad tuck you in at night
in the room with the dinosaur nightlight
that keeps the monsters under the bed
you're a knight and a king and an astronaut
all in the same day and all while
wearing a red and blue striped shirt
the bumps and bruises from falling off your skateboard
or from a crash landing when flying off the swings
are just battle scars that make you smile
after your mom kisses them and your tears dry
everyday is a treasure hunt and
everything is a clue
you think the world is yours to explore
(because it is)
and the future belongs to you.
_____________________________________________________________
challenge to make the world better: go for a drive and wave at strangers as you pass them. (a positive prank version of the old, honk-and-wave-the-other-way trick.) even though they might be confused and a little creeped out, they'll eventually appreciate the fact that a complete stranger was friendly to them and then they might keep the friendliness going. bonus human points* if you roll down your window and say hi, or give them a sandwhich.
*human points = extra points in life for being a real human being and making the world a better place. imagine that life is a game and to win you have the get the most human points. and kill the most zombies. but mostly, it's the human points part.
boxes of honey nut cheerios: three.
monday morning music:
the tallest man on earth
you believe you're invincible
(because you are)
you believe you can move the clouds
by just asking nicely
you know that home is wherever your mom and dad tuck you in at night
in the room with the dinosaur nightlight
that keeps the monsters under the bed
you're a knight and a king and an astronaut
all in the same day and all while
wearing a red and blue striped shirt
the bumps and bruises from falling off your skateboard
or from a crash landing when flying off the swings
are just battle scars that make you smile
after your mom kisses them and your tears dry
everyday is a treasure hunt and
everything is a clue
you think the world is yours to explore
(because it is)
and the future belongs to you.
_____________________________________________________________
challenge to make the world better: go for a drive and wave at strangers as you pass them. (a positive prank version of the old, honk-and-wave-the-other-way trick.) even though they might be confused and a little creeped out, they'll eventually appreciate the fact that a complete stranger was friendly to them and then they might keep the friendliness going. bonus human points* if you roll down your window and say hi, or give them a sandwhich.
*human points = extra points in life for being a real human being and making the world a better place. imagine that life is a game and to win you have the get the most human points. and kill the most zombies. but mostly, it's the human points part.
boxes of honey nut cheerios: three.
monday morning music:
the tallest man on earth
Monday, January 3, 2011
clouds&resolutions
i like looking at the clouds, not because i'm a flower child or anything because i'm totally not, but because they remind me of being a kid and children's books and just everything awesome about the world. because when you're a kid and looking up at the clouds you don't care that you have homework to do, or that you're fighting with your brother, and you don't know or care that the clouds are actually moving because the world is spinning around and around with you on top of it. (or is it wind? science was never my strongest subject.)
all you see is clouds that look like dragons and knights and monsters and your grandfather and france and pointing fingers and anything else your young and unhindered mind can dream up. that's why i love clouds.
the other day i saw this awesome cloud/cloud group because colorado has awesome clouds all the time.
i think it looks like a dragon twisting its head around towards its tail to firebreathe on whatever is following it. probably an airplane or a hot air balloon. and then it kind of morphed as the clouds moved and it looked like something completely different. cloudwatching is awesome. if you ever have writer's block or just a general lack of inspiration and creativity and imagination, just go outside and hope there are clouds and then watch some clouds!
anyway, now that it's 2011, i've got a fresh list of resolutions to not follow up on. although the top of the list is "actually follow through with this year's resolutions," so we'll see if that makes me work harder. my number two? "enjoy life and write more letters."
challenge to make the world better: learn some words in a foreign language so that if you ever go to that country you can brighten a foreign stranger's day by being able to say "i love you" and "please" and "thank you" and "you have a nice butt" (i'm going with swedish)
monday morning music:
rogue valley. album: the bookseller's house
boxes of honey nut cheerios in 2011: one. (i started before the year turned 2011 though, so i didn't really eat a whole box in two and a half days. but i could have.)
all you see is clouds that look like dragons and knights and monsters and your grandfather and france and pointing fingers and anything else your young and unhindered mind can dream up. that's why i love clouds.
the other day i saw this awesome cloud/cloud group because colorado has awesome clouds all the time.
i think it looks like a dragon twisting its head around towards its tail to firebreathe on whatever is following it. probably an airplane or a hot air balloon. and then it kind of morphed as the clouds moved and it looked like something completely different. cloudwatching is awesome. if you ever have writer's block or just a general lack of inspiration and creativity and imagination, just go outside and hope there are clouds and then watch some clouds!
anyway, now that it's 2011, i've got a fresh list of resolutions to not follow up on. although the top of the list is "actually follow through with this year's resolutions," so we'll see if that makes me work harder. my number two? "enjoy life and write more letters."
challenge to make the world better: learn some words in a foreign language so that if you ever go to that country you can brighten a foreign stranger's day by being able to say "i love you" and "please" and "thank you" and "you have a nice butt" (i'm going with swedish)
monday morning music:
rogue valley. album: the bookseller's house
boxes of honey nut cheerios in 2011: one. (i started before the year turned 2011 though, so i didn't really eat a whole box in two and a half days. but i could have.)
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