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mayotte2048 @lemm.ee
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Comments 32
What's your favorite sleeping technique?
  • There is a good fix for the tasks thing. Keep a notepad near your bed. As you get into bed, anything on your todo list you are worried about gets written on the notepad. Get in the habit of looking at the pad every morning. Then once you write it down, you should be able to let it go. And if you wake up because you remember something, just grab the notepad and scribble it down (doesn't need to be elaborate, just a word or two to trigger your memory in the morning.)

  • What's a great podcast you'd like to share?
  • youarenotsosmart.com psychology, sociology, & more. Sounds boring but is fascinating. His own description:

    The central theme of You Are Not So Smart is that you are unaware of how unaware you are which leads you to becoming the unreliable narrator in the story of your life. You Are Not So Smart is a fun exploration of the ways you and everyone else tends to develop an undeserved confidence in human perception, motivation, and behavior. I hope you’ll rediscover a humility and reconnect with the stumbling, fumbling community of humans trying to make sense of things the best we can.

  • *Permanently Deleted*
  • Brilliant people are only brilliant at their area of expertise. They can be horribly, even dangerously stupid in other areas. What's worse is that they often think they are brilliant at everything. (See Linus Pauling, vitamin c.)

  • First new U.S. nuclear reactor since 2016 is now in operation
  • Yep.

    We used to have the problem of senior citizens having their property taxes jacked up every year to the point that the taxes are almost as high as the original purchase price. Bunch of seniors were ending up losing their houses.

    Prop 13 was designed to fix that; and it did, but it also caused a bunch of 'unintended consequences'.

  • Looking for something new to read after The Expanse
  • On the post-apocalyptic theme i recent read 'Cantacle for Lieberwitz' following a monetary over several thousand years after a nuclear war as they try to save knowledge. Parts of it are 50s futurism (published in '59). There is even a scene describing how a cop gets a self-driving car to stop. An interesting read.

  • Looking for something new to read after The Expanse
  • In regards to Ocean at the end of the lane. You could really broaden that out to anything by Neil Gaiman (Ocean, stardust, graveyard book, neverware, good omens, american gods, etc. Etc.)

    And if you like Neil's fairytale-esque stuff, then check out Spinning Silver and Uprooted by Naomi Novik as well.