Cogito, Ergo Sumana
Sumana oscillates between logic and love

(0) : My Husband: Leonard likes the quiche and the Mexican-style hot chocolate at Tea Spot (MacDougal and West 3rd Street).

Leonard likes harmonizing with recorded music that he's listening to, or filking it or mashing it up, instead of just listening passively.

Leonard likes to rub his knuckles or his fingernails against each other when he's thinking, or making a witty point.

Leonard likes it when people invent things. He argues that Peter Frampton should get to use the vocoder because he was so inventive with it, but that others should have to get a black belt in vocoder to use it.

Leonard does not like being forced to do things.


(1) : One Peace At A Time: In school the teachers said, the real world isn't so forgiving, you won't be able to get extensions on your papers, you'll get worse consequences than bad grades if you do a poor job. And indeed, in my working world, the challenges don't end, I have to seek out feedback from my superiors, and I don't get summers off. Yet I find that I experience greater motivation and less procrastination and anxiety at my current job than I did in college. Why?

I remembered those bad old habits when I read some old blog entries about procrastination and avoidance in Ph.D. dissertation work. I found it reassuring to read those, and to see that I wasn't alone in my master's thesis experiences. My biggest problem was shame-related avoidance as a turbo maximizer on procrastination. And the gimmick that worked best for me: injecting a trusted third party. When I could talk to a friend about my problems, I often found out that I wasn't doing terribly, or at least that in the light of day my situation looked more manageable. When I made a first-draft pact with a friend, I had new motivation to start the project and gain momentum. Otherwise it was just me versus or with The System, possibly embodied in a teacher.

Talking and working with peers helps me set expectations (how original does this solution have to be? what's a reasonable amount of time to spend on this?) and break down big goals into sequences of little tasks. Socially I was a late bloomer, and it seemed to take me the vast majority of my academic life to grok that I work better this way.

I like working with people -- and for people. Aaron Swartz touches on this motivation in the Fog Creek Copilot documentary when he suggests that work is more interesting than institutional education -- why spend your time doing something fake when you could be doing something real? One inherent problem with academic make-work was that nothing except my own grades depended on it. I thought I was unmotivated, I had no idea how much responsibility I could handle, and I refused to consider a career in medicine because I didn't think I could handle being responsible for human lives. In retrospect, that was stupid, because basically all adults have to handle huge responsibilities with babies, money, driving cars, etc. and risk ruining and ending people's lives.

Then I moved up in the working world. Every time I gained real responsibilities, and saw my work serving others, I started working harder, valuing myself more, using my time more wisely, and attacking problems with greater energy. The experience of responsibility, not merely of earning money, nurtured my ambition.

A few weeks ago, Leonard and I ate at the Shake Shack in Madison Square Park, and we happened to talk to a trio of recent high school grads who were behind me in line. I think they were on a road trip, then off to freshman year at college. They asked us for advice, and Leonard said: start a business. Just find some random need that you can fill, part-time from your dorm room. There's a bunch of reasons why that's a good idea. You get pocket money. You get entrepreneurial experience while risk is cheap and your brain's more malleable. But the reason that strikes me hottest right now: you'll get people depending on you. If you find that tremendously motivating, that's a sign.

And if part of independence is disobedience, another, less frequently articulated part is the capacity for responsibility, not just for yourself but for your dependents. (From stuffed animals to computers to pets to clients to children? How will my staircase go?)

In school the teachers sounded like Morpheus from The Matrix: "Welcome to the desert of the real." But what grows in a sandbox?

Happy Independence Day, and Happy Interdependence Day.


(0) : Note To Self: Write web quiz: "Highlander episode title, Star Trek episode title, or both?"

Filed under:


(0) : Two Recent Requests: Leonard's Amazon wishlist (since his birthday is a week away), and the RSS feed for this blog. Thanks for the reminders, Mirabai!


(0) : Existence and Uniqueness (with apologies to Seth): Trying to think of unique things I've done since the last time I catalogued them. But some of the interesting things about me aren't so much things I've done as things that happened to me or my family. Yesterday's conversation with Stuart and Molly gave me a good euphemism for those oddball secrets and trivia: "my land in Colorado."

Per the rules of the game, I should ask my readers whether any of you have done the things I thought were unique within my circle, and then come up with a replacement for any duplicates. Go at it.

And as long as I'm doing blog memes: Rachel, a response to this one is coming soon.


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Spam As Folk Art
Weird and funny subject lines from spam we've received

() Craven Spam #2:

Remarkable evening,master!
==================
Want to be ready for coitus in a 4 sec? ?
Enter Here

Kind of an abrupt shift from the groveling to the sleazy.

() Eliminates Books:

  • No weight - no problems
    Houston, everything's fine.
  • You won't believe this greeting!
    It's actually quite a bad morning.
  • Eliminates books and education process call now
    To have your city sacked by barbarians.
  • Watch your instrument lengthen by the week
    Track the passage of time with our special week-measuring device.
  • Fill your bedroom with fire once and for all!
    Burn it! Burn it to the ground!
  • Yours Today - Tickets to See Ellen Live
    Using an online ticketing service proved to be the kidnappers' downfall.
  • Troy has anniversary party tomorrow, please don't forget
    Bring own horse.
  • Large European company is looking for Us employees.
    I think I lost it in the industrial park, but... Wait, there it is! It's seen us! Run!
  • We can get you a refinance nance quote in under 2mins fake
    Hey, I heard that.

() The Gang Of Four (Billion):

Facade, Proxy, and Factory

Yes, the most important design patterns for spammers.

() Return of the Son of Inappropriate Suffix Words:

New job! hecatomb

Sounds great! When can I start?

() This Is Your Thingy:

  • Earth-breaking medical discovery for you!
    Results of the test contaminations are right here, Professor Nemesis.
  • The bull is back
    Tell him we're closed.
  • Isn't strong and powerful full-size dic'k your dream?
    No, you must have someone else's case notes there, Doctor Jung.
  • lucky man, be careful!
    You know, I find that I just don't need to be.
  • Be a part of our team. Make no investments and great salary.
    I see what you did with that "no" clause.
  • Energy sector is hot right now
    Divert all power from shields!
  • Super-sized one-eyed monster will live in your pants in New Year!
    Argh!
  • Make all them cry for mercy and forget about you problems
    Thanks, I'll try that.
  • Your child is the Star In a full length 3D Christmas cartoon adventure.
    Please find enclosed lawsuit for home-video copyright infringement.
  • Appetite control for hours on end
    Eat our trademarked "breakfast" product, and we guarantee that you won't feel hungry again until lunchtime.
  • No doctor appointment is necessary
    That's a relief. Thanks, spam.
  • Watch 1,056 Live TV Channels on your PC
    Let me just tape your eyelids back.
  • This is your thingy.....this is your thingy on meds. Any questions?
    Are you sure you're the pharmacology lecturer, sir?

() On Worm Web:

  • Make money at home right now!
    But I'm at work!
  • Looking for happy relationship, Dear?
    Don't be silly, darling.
  • Don't worry about your equipment any more.
    I was on third watch and a rust monster ate it all. Sorry.
  • Hey, start seeing dollars pouring in.
    Drink this.
  • what children
    The ones I was paying you to babysit?
  • You'll easily counter with your
    Instant-speed email deletion spell!
  • Unwanted Pounds could be easily burnt off!
    Yes, they could, but that doesn't mean it's a good idea.
  • try bank apple, on worm web
    I'm not sure that metaphor really works.
  • Do you want a prosperous future? GET YOUR UNIVERSITY DIPLOMA!
    Okay, dad, okay.

() Tales That Will Chill You:

Announcing the FIRST-EVER TALKING Thomas Kinkade collectible Story House! LISTEN as Thomas Kinkade reads aloud the beloved holiday poem, "The Night Before Christmas"! Watch as each impeccably sculpted room LIGHTS UP in turn as the classic story unfolds. Experience anew the delight of Christmas through Thomas Kinkade's gentle voice and his charming Victorian holiday artistry.

The voice is coming from inside the house!

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Creative Commons License
This work by Sumana Harihareswara is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License.