(8 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)
The transcript can be read here
by Aaron Swartz
When you first begin to exercise, it’s somewhat painful. Not wildly painful, like touching a hot stove, but enough that if your only goal was to avoid pain, you certainly would stop doing it. But if you keep exercising… well, it just keeps getting more painful. When you’re done, if you’ve really pushed yourself, you often feel exhausted and sore. And the next morning it’s even worse.
If that was all that happened, you’d probably never do it. It’s not that much fun being sore. Yet we do it anyway – because we know that, in the long run, the pain will make us stronger. Next time we’ll be able to run harder and lift more before the pain starts.
And knowing this makes all the difference. Indeed, we come to see the pain as a sort of pleasure – it feels good to really push yourself, to fight through the pain and make yourself stronger. Feel the burn! It’s fun to wake up sore the next morning, because you know that’s just a sign that you’re getting stronger.
Few people realize it, but psychological pain works the same way. Most people treat psychological pain like the hot stove – if starting to think about something scares them or stresses them out, they quickly stop thinking about it and change the subject.
The problem is that the topics that are most painful also tend to be the topics that are most important for us: they’re the projects we most want to do, the relationships we care most about, the decisions that have the biggest consequences for our future, the most dangerous risks that we run. We’re scared of them because we know the stakes are so high. But if we never think about them, then we can never do anything about them. [..]
Next time you start feeling that feeling, that sense of pain from deep in your head that tells you to avoid a subject – ignore it. Lean into the pain instead. You’ll be glad you did.
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May the Goddess guide him on his journey to the Summerlands. May his family and friends and the world find Peace.
The Wheel Turns. Blessed Be.
a young man so full of potential and good intent and . . . THIS!!
If you have not yet read it, his parents, have expressed their heart in their memorium to him:
a major global company(2008) we had to cut back on subscription library search “services” in order to justify patent research. At the time the patent office itself was undergoing an “IT” revamp of their IT “services” further interrupting/complicating patent access and research.
Real world equivalent example.
Ok to maintain a skill in the engineering world one must be proficient in say ProE which is a 10 thousand dollar 3D CAD program of very complicated proportions. From my engineering standpoint and background the complexity and expense of engineering programs and access to any and all DRM/IT proprietary information is, has gone into that top secretness of this post 911 world. It has been for me and insanely/evil oriented concept I have pondered since, well even before the towers fell down.
Remember I got to escape US culture for a whole year. I never actually came back with the same worldview. Now I have to speak of it(the US) in terms of zombination.
I hope everyone will read Stephen Lendman’s (a Chicago writer) article: Aaron Swartz’s Suspicious Death and be sure to follow the links — I think there may be some definite merit in what is said!
Please read!
Aaron’s father was even more vociferous about what and why he died!
‘Aaron was killed by the government’ – Robert Swartz on his son’s death
This is a much greater tragedy, I fear, than people really fathom . . . . !
I don’t mean in any way to denigrate the significance of Aaron Swartz’s death and the heartfelt outpouring of sympathy and anger but I am almost numb from so many terrible cases.
There is a long, long, long story at Huffington Post about the horrendous murder of a young woman in Mississippi and then the use of largely concocted forensic evidence to convict an innocent man with a follow-up article on a particularly odious pair of forensic specialists but they are hardly alone.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/…
I don’t particularly recommend anyone read this article that deals in some detail with bite mark evidence that is now largely discredited but you might consider that Ted Bundy was convicted largely on such evidence.
Ann Rule wrote a brutally honest account of her fetching and carrying for her comrade on a suicide prevention hotline. There is a notable line or two in which Rule talks about young Ted Bundy always accompanying a middle-aged woman out into the streets in the dark very early morning hours to her car to see no psycho attacks her.
Ann Rule herself took some exception to my describing her epiphany on seeing the bite mark evidence that largely convicted Ted Bundy in Florida. I don’t see how you could put her own words any other way but regardless trial attendees and jurors were suitably impressed. A competent defense lawyer should have been able to blow the bite mark evidence to smithereens though there was no doubt Bundy was guilty of that murder and many others. Bundy fortuitiously chose to act as his own lawyer.
How do you top one George W. Bush commuting (the governor of Texas can only recommend commutation or pardon but it obviously carries some weight) the sentence of one of the most prolific and ghastly of all serial killers, Henry Lee Lucas, because he had been convicted of one murder he did not commit? The actual murderer again gets off scot free to continue his life of crime.
I have many, many ideas for reforming our terrible “justice” system but nothing is more atrocious than the plea bargaining that sent Aaron Swartz to his death.
Best, Terry