Yet another way I’m living in the past…

Today I revisited an activity I hadn’t participated in since I was, oh, maybe twelve years old or so.  I got tubes inserted into my eardrums again. I had it done a couple of times as a kid, I guess there’s something about my system that causes my ears to not be able to regulate pressure naturally. I like to think that it’s my massive brain squeezing out other required functionality.

In any case, I’m not sure how much better I’m hearing just yet. It does seem better, so far. At least I don’t feel pressure adjustments every time I swallow. I knew it wouldn’t be like magic, because some of my hearing loss is from doing stupid shit – spending too much time around loud noise without protection. But some of it was clearly the result of a pressure differential between inside and outside the eardrum. And now that’s been resolved.

Unlike when I was twelve, this time it was outpatient. I won’t describe the ghastly, barbaric things that I endured today… or maybe I will. Several injections of local anesthetic into each ear canal. Incision into eardrum. Vacuuming up any leftover debris behind eardrum – a process that sounds like jet engines in your ears, and feels like, well, a vacuum, causing highly uncomfortable pressure changes in the ear canal. All of that is better than waking up in a recovery room needing to puke.

Here are some diagrams describing PE Tube Insertion.

eartube

When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro…

See here how everythingIMG_20150218_105213724_HDR
lead up to this day….

Everything you do, every interaction you’ve had, swirls together to create something sweet and delicious.

And when it’s almost perfect, almost just-right, and the light shines on it, you can see all those things this glorious moment is standing on, and things you once pondered as frivolous take on new meanings. New connections are born, and even history takes on a different perspective.

Your role in the universe is redefined, at least for a moment.

Finally got around to watching Blue Ruin tonight…

I finally got around to watching Blue Ruin tonight. I had been hearing good things from people whose opinion I value. I had ordered the DVD, and it had been just sitting here waiting for me to get around to it.  Long weekend = extra day = time to watch Blue Ruin (after watching last night’s Walking Dead, of course, which I missed because we were enjoying SNL’s 40th).

It’s the kind of movie I like. I like difficult movies with dark themes, deep conflicts and ambiguous endings. (Hard Candy, anyone?)  Not that this ending was particularly ambiguous, I guess.  Pretty much everyone involved got what they deserved.

The most important theme, running through the entire movie, is consequence. The characters make decisions, and consequences result from those decisions, which probably could be predicted and prevented, but you know, that whole free will thing gets in the way of common sense and good manners sometimes.

blueruin

Mingering Mike, at the Smithsonian SOON!

Check out the story of Mingering Mike, which is a magical story of someone’s personal folk art taking on a life of its own, and then go check out the exhibit later this year.

If you’re not completely fascinated and awed by this story, you’re dead inside.  http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2015/feb/11/-sp-mystery-of-mingering-mike-the-soul-legend-who-never-existed-jon-ronson?CMP=share_btn_fb

http://www.mingeringmike.com/images/misc/homepage%20w%20LARGE%20dates.jpg

Feeling a bit slow? Go Renshaw yourself.

tachistoscopeHeinlein, in several of his works, made reference to Samuel Renshaw, a WWII-era psychologist famous for teaching a form of speed-reading, or more aptly, speed-comprehension, that involved flashing images or text on a screen for brief intervals to force the student to perceive them faster.

If you’re interested in such things, and I am, you might be interested in an article I found on the subject. Click below to read it.

You’re Not As Smart As You Could Be