Keep Time the Way Nature Intended It

Imbolc                                                                    Hare Moon

It’s a scourge.  It’s unnatural.  It’s Daylight Savings Time.  Aside from being an obvious oxymoron, this idea forces us to change our sleep patterns every six months.  Sleep is important and habits are important to sleep.  Ergo.

(Plus, trees don’t change time.)

Here’s a link to a NYT room for debate piece on the subject:

“For days after “springing forward,” many of us feel a little jet-lagged and cranky. And the research is piling up to show that the time change affects more than our mood. It changes energy use, health, worker productivity and even traffic safety.

Does daylight saving time do more harm than good?”

Kairos

Imbolc                                                      Hare Moon

A bit more on an old topic, inspired by thinking about Jenkinson’s remarks that appear below.

The humanities are important as just that, the human forming portion of our educational deposit.  Over the millennia, stretching back to the time of gods emerging from the deserts of the Middle East and continuing right through the poetry and literature and painting and sculpture, the movies and television and games, the sports and horticulture and domestic arts of our day, we have had to grow into our lives, into our identity as human beings. It is not easy, but it is the most important task we have and the one which the family, the schools, our societies and cultures exist to engage.

This is not an argument for the humanities over science, technology and mathematics.  Far from it.  We have needed and will continue to need the valuable insights that come from deep thinking about the atomic structure of things, the hard rock science of the earth, the softer touches of the biological inquiries and the neuroscientific and all the other forms of scientific endeavor with which we humans engage.  But consider the difference in importance between raising a boy or a girl and lifting a rocket ship to the moon.  Which matters more?

It is not in the theory of evolution or in the biological sciences or in matters astronomical that we find the answer to such a question.  Even though we often pretend it is in this insecure age the answer is not in the psychological studies.  No, the answer to a question of value, of significance, of which is more than this lies only in the realm of culture.

The most important task of our time is said simply and defined humanistically, but requires the sciences in all their potency to finish:  create a sustainable human presence on this earth.

Why is this most important?  Because if it is not accomplished, the earth, no matter our scientific prowess, will scour us from her face.  She will make the thin layer of our habitation, from maybe 6 inches below the surface of the soil, to maybe 12 miles or so above the earth-the troposphere where most weather occurs-outside the parameters necessary for our existence.  That is, as the biologists are found of saying, an extinction level event.

So we are at a moment of kairos, a greek word meaning the opportune time.  Paul Tillich a theologian of the last century saw kairotic moments as “…crises in history which create an opportunity for, and indeed demand, an existential decision by the human subject.” Wiki His clearest example from the mid-point of that bloody hundred years was World War II, but even WW II and WW I put together do not equal the crisis we face now, a kairotic moment which, as Tillich said, demands an existential decision by us all.

(damaged relief of the Greek god Kairos of 4 century. BC)

The will and the skill to make that decision, a decision for or against our children and our grandchildren’s future, lies not in the sciences, but in the humanities.  It is in our sense of who we are as a species, as a being with a history, that we will find what we need to decide.  And, contrary to many, I am now convinced that the biggest barriers confounding our ability to make a non-suicidal decision lie in the realm of governance, a thoroughly humanistic endeavor.

Strip away those disciplines that force us to consider our humanity and we will be left with the calculus of Malthus.

 

 

 

Off the Rhythm

Imbolc                                                              Hare Moon

Boy.  Started working with translations I did a couple of months ago and it was hard.  I’ve not been hitting it every day like I do when I’m on my rhythm.  I don’t know why, but that matters.  I’m way ahead of the work I need to do for my every two week times with Greg, by a hundred verses or so, a bit more.  At this point when I work with him I’m tracking backwards over work I did well before.  But that doesn’t explain the sluggishness. It really seems to be a function of staying at it, almost like staying in shape.

(Deucalion and Pyrrha Repeople the World by Throwing Stones Behind Them, c.1636 (oil on canvas)  by Rubens, Peter Paul (1577-1640))

I would have gotten more done today if I hadn’t decided to fool around with Bittorrent Snyc, but there you are.

More review tomorrow morning, then an hour with Greg.  He monitors my progress, fine tunes my work, keeps me attentive to things I miss.  He also helps me with strategy about how to approach the task of translation.  At this point that helps as much as particular work with the grammar.

Based on his guidance I always look first for the verbs, then the nominatives (subjects) and the accusatives (direct objects).  If I get lost, I do a quick diagram to find my way back. There’s also been an interesting apprentice style aspect of his teaching where I listen to him go through a process of translation, use of the dictionary, what do when you’re stuck and mimic it.  It’s been a surprisingly successful method of learning.

It’s Free!

Imbolc                                                                Hare Moon

I wanted, for some reason, to establish a dropbox type relationship between this computer and the netbook which I take with me when I travel.  This means being able to access files on this computer from a distance.  This seems like a good thing to me, though just why I can’t exactly say.

Anyhow I discovered Bittorrent has a program called Sync that will do just this.  It establishes a P2P relationship between one computer or device and another for this purpose.  P2P = peer to peer, that is, both devices are equal to each other.  Dropbox and sugarsync and google drive and microsoft skydrive offer a similar service except you have to upload your files to their cloud.  Now a cloud is only a series of large hard-drives bunkered somewhere, fed lots of electricity and cooled by refrigerants.

In practical terms that means you give your data to someone else to store, then when you want it, you dial into their cloud and retrieve it.  The catch?  It’s free.  And, as I read somewhere recently, when a computer service is free, you’re the product.  That means they can access my data, mine it for advertising relevant facts and then sell me to hundreds if not thousands of others.  Also, the government can, with a warrant, crack the cloud and peak inside.

With a P2P setup all the data remains on your computers, for which the government needs a warrant and all others need the password.  In Sync’s case the password is a 32 character secret that establishes the bond between two computers.  32 characters make cracking the code technically very difficult.  Probably not worth it for my vacation pictures.

So.  I download sync.  And nothing happened.  Hmmm.  After a lot of hmming, I investigated various help forums.  Ah.  That could be an issue.  The two computers have to sync up timewise.  I fixed that since the netbook was still on mountain time from my last trip to Colorado.  Nope.

After a lot of head thumping, I tried a favorite ploy.  I turned off both computers and started them up again.  Ah.  Syncing at last.  Tomorrow I’ll learn if it does what I think it does.

This took most of the morning.

Coming Up in March

Imbolc                                                                      Hare Moon

Looking down the month toward our 24th anniversary (Monday) and the date I’m wheels 1000Kate and Charlie in Edenon the road for Tucson (the 18th).  24 years with Kate and our relationship improves like fine wine, gaining more nuance and depth, more body with each passing year.  This year we return to the Nicollet Island Inn for dinner, the spot from which we launched our honeymoon.  As spring rolled forward in March of 1990 those three weeks in Europe were as good a beginning as the marriage itself. Next year we’ll celebrate our 25th anniversary at Mama’s Fish House on Maui.

The Tucson trip grows closer.  These rolling retreats, as I like to think of alone time behind the wheel, are really just road trips.  Road trips are part of the American way, peregrinatio updated for the age of the internal combustion engine.

This one of course has its focus self discovery, focus, personal deepening so it will have a more spiritual note, but it will also include my usual visits to spots of natural and historic interest.  Among the possibilities are Carlsbad Caverns, the Saguaro forests, a state park or two in Arizona, the Sonoran Desert Museum, Mt. Kitt, Chaco Canyon, Joshua Tree National Park (probably not, but it’s within reach) and a second visit to the Arbor Day lodge and farm in Nebraska City, Nebraska.

Imbolc                                                                         Hare Moon

In a continuing education environment all day.  Tiring.  I’ll post more about it later tonight or tomorrow.  It was about current brain science as it relates to anxiety, depression, phobias, PTSD and other psychological issues.

Body and Mind

Imbolc                                                             Hare Moon

The latin today was a brainbuster.  At least for me.  In the first sentence there was a passive periphrastic with its dative of agent and gerundive plus an imperfect subjunctive. Now if you think that sounds confusing, well, it was to me.  Not sure I got it either.  Two steps ahead, a step or two back into Wheelock to check the grammar, seeking help from the commentaries.

(how I felt after the Latin)

Workout today though was good.  I’ve switched it up a bit, doing high intensity intervals (4 of one minute to one and a half minutes) combined with sections of the P90X workout.  The P90X is the resistance work, the intervals the aerobics.  Seems to be a good fit.

Maybe not what Tony Horton intended, but it’s gonna work for me.  That means two lower intensity days on the treadmill between the three interval workouts.

We Three Skeptics

Imbolc                                                          Hare Moon

So, three Woolly’s walked into a bar.  The punch line is:  who is I?

Met for lunch with Bill Schmidt and Tom Crane today in Maple Grove, Biaggi’s.  I know about the three kings, the three wise guys and I’d title this group the three skeptical guys. We share a common suspicion of easy answers, traditional thought when it constricts the mind and the existence of only one I within.

Tom made an interesting observation about the I, “Maybe it’s more like a cloud with a floating data point, or like wave/photon theory of light.”  Makes sense to me.

We ate, then Tom, the still employed of the three of us, had to leave for a conference call. Ah, the workaday world.  I don’t miss it.

 

Still Under Construction

Imbolc                                                                     Hare Moon

Ancientrailsgreatwheel.com has not gotten much attention so far, but this is its first month.  That’s ok by me since I plan a significant change in its content and intended audience.  It will become, by Beltane, or May 1st, a blog focused on climate adaptation and mitigation here in Minnesota with a special focus on the metro area.  It’s title, Great Wheel, will remain the same for now.

Since most of the climate adaptation story will be told locally, having a place where resources and experiences are easily available will be a real service.  In addition, the climate mitigation story will only grow in importance as the years add up, so Great Wheel will be in a good position to document and comment on Minnesota’s part of that global story.

There will be news, resources and comment.  I plan to run it as a hybrid with magazine long form journalism, right now news feeds and reference library pages focused on how-to adapt tools for towns, cities, counties, and regions in the state.  It will take a while to get its shape right, but I want it to be the first place you look if you have a question about climate change as it relates to Minnesota.