alexr_rwx: (juggling)
Alex R ([personal profile] alexr_rwx) wrote2006-05-15 12:38 am
Entry tags:

juggling and yoga and hugs

- This is a really good article about brains and brain chemistry and the mind/body problem and chronic pain and feedback and stuff (on the NYT, from metafilter)

- Juggling and frisbee in the Other Park is pretty awesome. Yay for hanging out with Lisa [livejournal.com profile] pyrona and JD [livejournal.com profile] yourusername and Ross [livejournal.com profile] rheavatarin and Martin [livejournal.com profile] samarin for the afternoon! JD has non-sharp juggling-knives, and Lisa's getting into contact juggling, hooray!

- Also awesome: Bikram yoga. Thanks to Jacquie [livejournal.com profile] fluffyevilbunny for taking me. It's yoga, but done in a really hot (105 degrees) room, for great stretchiness and sweating. Yoga rocks pretty hard, and I really enjoyed the Bikram-style school over in Decatur. You should try it; you might enjoy.

- *hugs* Really. Calm down. It's going to be okay, oh world. Either we're in for eventual heat death, or maybe it's a closed universe and time and space stretch out infinitely in all directions and it's a giant perpetual motion machine. So relax, have a cookie, do a pushup, give somebody a hug. That is all.

[identity profile] gtv42.livejournal.com 2006-05-15 05:31 am (UTC)(link)
I thought a closed universe was the one with time and space finite and/or an eventual heat death. An open universe is the negative-curvature thingy with (for all intensive porpoises) infinite space and time, right? Right?

But you are entitled to your own opinion of the grand unknowable.*

I'm too close to bed to read that article now, but earlier today I was Wikipedia stumbling and read about Fibromyalgia. Interesting stuff! I'm glad my only chronic pain is existential. Woe.

___
*Except I saw that nod to the steady-state hypothesis. Thermodynamics is all like "Hell naaw bitch!"

[identity profile] reality-calls.livejournal.com 2006-05-16 12:49 am (UTC)(link)
I never personally felt the whole "heat death" idea was all that scientific...  I mean, it takes the laws we know at this point in time and extrapolates to something that will only become apparent many billions(if not trillions) of years in the future assuming nothing else is discovered in the mean time outside our current body of knowledge that may affect the course of events...  Isn't that sort of extreme speculation generally frowned upon in other fields?

But that article was awesome.  I'm going to have to get myself an MRI machine so I can train my brain not to feel pain.  I wonder what else you can train yourself to do?  Could you improve your ability to focus?  Regulate your heartbeat?  Increase your IQ?  Seriously exciting stuff, that.

      "Live from the People's Republic"