Another hearing

by JanieM Pulling hsh’s question to the front page, if for no other reason than that we’re going to have to be able to walk and chew gum (and a few other things) at the same time if we’re not going down in flames: Anyone want to guess what sort of newly discovered evidence prompted … Read more

Too Late, Alas

by wj Overturning Roe v Wade has gotten lots of play here this week. But it wasn’t the only decision with an impact on our lives. Today, the US Senate managed, for the first time in 30 years, to pass a gun control bill. A bipartisan gun control bill. The bill itself is a far … Read more

The Devil, You Know

by JanieM Michael Cain posed a question about a Geico ad in the previous thread, and that set me to thinking about that simplest of topics: money. One of the notes I jotted down was “Sponsored,” referring to Amazon’s Sponsored product ads, which are: 1. annoying as hell; and 2. a brilliant, diabolical way to … Read more

The Hearings

by JanieM Seems like people might want to discuss the Congressional hearings and related topics. As a starting point and with GftNC’s permission, I’m copying her comment from downstairs as a starting point. So, the hearings. I watched the whole thing (unlike the first one, which was in the middle of the night UK time). … Read more

Hobbies, practice, mastery

by JanieM

The original trigger for this post was the fact that I’ve taken up photography in a serious way in old age. (I’m 72. That my mother lived to be 96 skews how I calibrate “old” – but that’s a topic for another time. Let’s just say life is uncertain, and ever more clearly so, as I get older.)

I had jotted down some notes for a post and taken a break to work on pictures when Lightroom crashed, requiring some careful reconstruction that’s going to take a good chunk out of my evening. Which may be just as well, because a post on “Hobbies, Practice, Mastery” was promising to become as long as Ulysses.

So I’ll scale back and just try to give us a starting point for conversation.

I’ve spent most of my life as a dilettante, doing what has come easily: algebra, computer programming, writing, playing music. But I always stopped trying when I got to a plateau where I would have had to work through difficulty or, heaven forfend, face possible failure to keep getting better.

And for the most part I’ve enjoyed activities where there are clear answers. You can solve an equation, and a computer program has to work (the inevitability of bugs notwithstanding). With music and writing I’ve remained a reasonably competent amateur, never working hard enough to test myself in contexts where I might be shown up as the dabbler that I am.

Now I’m deeply immersed in loving and trying to get better at “art” — a kind of activity with no clear answers. The path forward can be very murky to someone who likes solving equations and passing quizzes. To get better at taking pictures, I have to let go of a lot of my old habits (both photographic and psychological) and learn a bunch of new stuff that doesn’t necessarily come easily, even the parts that involve numbers!

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What are sports for?

by JanieM Borrowing wj’s comment from Ugh’s thread: Good to know that the Ohio GOP is on the case when it comes to protecting girls involved in athletics. https://digbysblog.net/2022/06/05/a-new-low-3/ Pfui! Posted by: wj | June 05, 2022 at 03:46 PM The Ohio bill is appalling (they’re also working on arming teachers and school staff, by … Read more

The Politics of Personal Projection

by Ugh It continues to amaze me the lengths to which GOPers – whether politicians or their right wing media sycophants (or is it the other way around?) – engage in projection.  Like, anything they accuse Democrats of they have either (i) already done; (ii) are doing; and/or (iii) will do (anticipatory projection?).   Particularly anything … Read more