• Log InLog In
  • Register
Liquid`
Team Liquid Liquipedia
EDT 01:49
CEST 07:49
KST 14:49
  • Home
  • Forum
  • Calendar
  • Streams
  • Liquipedia
  • Features
  • Store
  • EPT
  • TL+
  • StarCraft 2
  • Brood War
  • Smash
  • Heroes
  • Counter-Strike
  • Overwatch
  • Liquibet
  • Fantasy StarCraft
  • TLPD
  • StarCraft 2
  • Brood War
  • Blogs
Forum Sidebar
Events/Features
News
Featured News
Power Rank - Esports World Cup 202548RSL Season 1 - Final Week9[ASL19] Finals Recap: Standing Tall15HomeStory Cup 27 - Info & Preview18Classic wins Code S Season 2 (2025)16
Community News
BSL Team Wars - Bonyth, Dewalt, Hawk & Sziky teams4Weekly Cups (July 14-20): Final Check-up0Esports World Cup 2025 - Brackets Revealed19Weekly Cups (July 7-13): Classic continues to roll8Team TLMC #5 - Submission re-extension4
StarCraft 2
General
Power Rank - Esports World Cup 2025 Jim claims he and Firefly were involved in match-fixing RSL Revival patreon money discussion thread RSL Season 1 - Final Week The GOAT ranking of GOAT rankings
Tourneys
Esports World Cup 2025 Sparkling Tuna Cup - Weekly Open Tournament Sea Duckling Open (Global, Bronze-Diamond) FEL Cracov 2025 (July 27) - $8000 live event RSL: Revival, a new crowdfunded tournament series
Strategy
How did i lose this ZvP, whats the proper response
Custom Maps
External Content
Mutation #239 Bad Weather Mutation # 483 Kill Bot Wars Mutation # 482 Wheel of Misfortune Mutation # 481 Fear and Lava
Brood War
General
Ginuda's JaeDong Interview Series BGH Auto Balance -> http://bghmmr.eu/ [Update] ShieldBattery: 1v1 Fastest Support! ASL20 Preliminary Maps BSL Team Wars - Bonyth, Dewalt, Hawk & Sziky teams
Tourneys
CSL Xiamen International Invitational [Megathread] Daily Proleagues [CSLPRO] It's CSLAN Season! - Last Chance [BSL 2v2] ProLeague Season 3 - Friday 21:00 CET
Strategy
Simple Questions, Simple Answers I am doing this better than progamers do.
Other Games
General Games
Stormgate/Frost Giant Megathread Nintendo Switch Thread [MMORPG] Tree of Savior (Successor of Ragnarok) Path of Exile CCLP - Command & Conquer League Project
Dota 2
Official 'what is Dota anymore' discussion
League of Legends
Heroes of the Storm
Simple Questions, Simple Answers Heroes of the Storm 2.0
Hearthstone
Heroes of StarCraft mini-set
TL Mafia
TL Mafia Community Thread Vanilla Mini Mafia
Community
General
US Politics Mega-thread Things Aren’t Peaceful in Palestine Russo-Ukrainian War Thread The Games Industry And ATVI Stop Killing Games - European Citizens Initiative
Fan Clubs
SKT1 Classic Fan Club! Maru Fan Club
Media & Entertainment
[\m/] Heavy Metal Thread Anime Discussion Thread Movie Discussion! [Manga] One Piece Korean Music Discussion
Sports
2024 - 2025 Football Thread Formula 1 Discussion TeamLiquid Health and Fitness Initiative For 2023 NBA General Discussion
World Cup 2022
Tech Support
Installation of Windows 10 suck at "just a moment" Computer Build, Upgrade & Buying Resource Thread
TL Community
The Automated Ban List
Blogs
Ping To Win? Pings And Their…
TrAiDoS
momentary artworks from des…
tankgirl
from making sc maps to makin…
Husyelt
StarCraft improvement
iopq
Socialism Anyone?
GreenHorizons
Customize Sidebar...

Website Feedback

Closed Threads



Active: 632 users

Draught of Ideas

Blogs > Roe
Post a Reply
Roe
Profile Blog Joined June 2010
Canada6002 Posts
August 30 2013 06:07 GMT
#1
The Summer of George:

In a desperate attempt to repel the incoming wave of cynicism and abjection, I’ve made a few decisions to change my life. The following is a counterattack, a last push for freedom. My dream of the summer.

One: Exercise.

Two: Don’t surrender to that quieting melody of nativism.



Well, that's all I got.





I sat a few seats over from Geddy Lee at the Jays' game the other week without knowing it!


You’re lying in bed, thinking about something very intensely. You get an idea and another one comes along, you set up their places with structure. A few more make their way and you think, maybe I should write this down - lest I lose it forever. On your way to the console you lose a few words, and suddenly all you have written down is half a barely intelligible sentence while you cringe to yourself at the thought of losing an opportunity.

I have this problem almost every time I write. I can think of such great ideas and such great ways to say them when I’m in bed, or in the bathroom, anywhere away from the chance of writing. When I hit the pen to paper or fingers to keyboard the words and thoughts fly right out of my head, evaporated. And I can converse with myself, have eloquent dialogue, racing with description and ingenious with forming words. Then some days I get soggy-minded and it seems the will to write (and by extension the will to live) is all gone. And with it comes depression and hopelessness, which reinforces my helplessness. Most of the time it's in what I don't write that I wish I could say, like there's something more I wish I could illustrate...

It’s almost like I have the old influences of school friends who were very much … well let's just say I'd expect them to go into business rather than arts or science. There is the business type in me that seemed to be buried since I first questioned the purpose of life (and how to live a good one at that). Since then I haven't been able to reconcile my inner argument.

Once my summer vacation hit I set out to explore every avenue of a future I could. First up was programming, so I went to codeacademy and learned HTML/CSS/ and javascript. The 'internet' languages were surprisingly easy to learn compared to something like C++. I remember when I was a kid I'd use some HTML to design my Neopets shop webpage. It was kind of fun relearning that stuff and realizing how simple the code is. And since it seems like the real hardcore, necessary, and nitty-gritty language to learn, I started getting into C++. Can't say I've learned it well but I get the basics. (For more background info, I've been learning C# for a year now).

I feel it may have been an attempt to passify career anxiety between me and my father and at the same time reestablish the connection that's been missing since preschool. Am I only doing this to become something acceptable, something successful and useful to society (which is of course an extension of my parents)? On the street I saw an old friend's dad. We chatted and I told him I was learning how to program. I expected him to be impressed and wished he would tell me I was finally making something useful of myself, yet his expression was neutral, almost skeptical.

As I learned all these new skills I felt a rush of importance for life, like I had a reason to get up the next morning (and to go to sleep early). But as I go on, things are slowing down. Things are starting to feel like they don't matter again. All this verbiage is so meaningless and pointless. I'm finding less motivation to complete even my own projects, much less to explore the horizons of databases or neural networks. I wonder if it was all just a wish to return to the time when I was 11 and played neopets and surfed the net with my sister and cousin in her basement late at night.

Some day the technology and commands will be obsolete won't they? Can one say the same about a writer? The thought of neural networks brings up another problem. Computers automate our lives, well, how long until this automation encroaches on less frivolous territory? The field of neuroscience is also advancing rapidly, and yet I can only feel that this is a bad thing. That our minds and bodies have become so fused with machine, that we lose our identity and we lose our weaknesses! No longer chained to the ironies of our unconscious or our biology. Is this not escapism and the core illusion run to its conclusion?

Wouldn't I be contributing to the end of things by studying the mind or by computerizing the world? Sooner or later this kind of knowledge will be used for tyranny, the kind we've only seen in science fiction books. It's not something I can put my tongue on but it just doesn't feel right. I'm too attached to the old world -- nostalgic for times never lived.





I'm frustrated because it seems the will to write may be gone and I may be at the cusp of realizing I'm not a writer. ..but what about the stories I used to write? And the passion I once felt for writing essays? Did I just lose my imagination? Have I simply not practiced enough? Rilke’s words come back to me every time I think about this and yet I can’t find an answer to his question. Only more searching and finding empty spaces in my mind results.

I guess…the answer lies in whatever happens. If I really felt the need to write, I’d write, and I’d be writing. Was I really that deluded? I wonder if this was all just a process of self-exploration, not some grand endeavour in perfecting the writer's craft.

I'm hit with scenes in my mind; it could be anything, like a green pasture with the sun blazing the sky...the political turmoil and the irony befalling people in their lives. I wonder should I be better at making films? Or is this just another ploy for narcissism? As I watch the Woody Allen doc...

If my father had been more of a romantic when I was growing up, more of an artist...would I have turned out to be more engaged to writing? Or if I had been straight, would I be more attracted to the artist's life? (Nothing Freudian going on there). Maybe it simply was all the years spent playing video games that let my mind slip away into the annihilation I always wanted.

I see people here writing well thought out, coherent and intelligent blogs every week! How could I match that...how could I have what they have...that raison d'etre, that prerogative to declare one's ideas with such precision?

My mind is fading -- I can feel a great emptiness emerging like when the Moon threatened to engulf Clock Town, except from within! I wish I could attain that freedom I once spoke of...hard to believe it was only weeks ago I set myself affixed with that optimism. Guess it takes a long time to repair long term damage.

I wish I had something to write about...some cause to promote, some lie to expose. But in a way I just don't care. No sense of direction, no ...






Long pause in the action. The months go by deeper into the heat of a metropolitan summer. Many a night have I spent encroaching on the morning, using its time to disassemble my mind. Battling myself as I look for rest, terrified of being stolid and idle. Avoid invalidism.


I fear I may be nearing the end of this stage of my life. Was writing just a form of therapy to guide me in sexuality? Nothing else seems to inspire me so. How long can this dream go on?


No, it’s too simple a life…I was going to take on the great issues…not build apps and APIs and such mind-numbing, psychological-entropy accelerating programs. Is the only solace to be found in some kind of ascetic solitude?


The more I uncover the less I like about myself. I'm afraid I may like giving in to crass and cynical entertainment, to being petty and enthralled in my own stupidity. (Next thing you know I'll be listening to top 40s on my Ipod).


Was it all just pseudo-intellectual rabble? (rabble? or rubble? What word am I looking for here?)


Cleaning up my desktop…so many Word documents with titles that seem to hold great ideas. Most are unfinished or barely started at all.


4 AM: What the hell am I gonna do with myself. I don’t want to throw away the good chance I have now of making a good life for myself. Not just that…a life well lived, not just another cog in the machine.


The more I open myself up to real romance the less I seem to care about the things in which I took my bit of pride.


How can I set out to live with such a stolid mindset?


And yet for some reason the more I program the more easily the words come to me in my offline life, with greater vivacity and precision. Like a contrarian impulse, I waver between two different paths against my own will.


Do I really enjoy being crass and cynical?


Still having breathing, joint, muscle, skin, back, head, and sleeping problems the doctors can't seem to figure out. Just makes me feel like I'm on the verge of the infirmary at all times. I'm too young to be feeling this old...


I like the good formatting of code and I can't stand that fact. Stop complaining.



[image loading]


Why is it so hard to get through this damn book?? A year ago I loved reading Live and Let Die, and Casino Royale. Now it's labour making it through Drax showing Bond his missile. Maybe just -- huh? -- my mother said.


I set down to write a story, mind goes blank. Writing about myself was a crutch I've stood on for too long. Write about nothing?


Just write? (No matter how nonsensical and crappy it is, like some hacky Joyce imitator?)


Losing the will to write more and more. No inspiration. No clashing or troubles to overcome. No more feeling like I'm insane. Now I'm normal.


You have to let go


If I let go I'll lose my mind.


Bland meaningless existence ahead.


Maybe I'll just grow up and be a shill for consumerism, mainstream society, and such. (You already are one!)


Whatever comes


It matters not


Quieting lyrics of trees and wind on my mind


Come sink back!


Come and my mind will drift for these precious few weeks


Write to myself.


Keep it to myself.


Imagination is a terrible thing to waste


This is the end, (my only friend!),
Tho I never wished to say goodbye:
You made me warm and my tears dry






I wonder what it's like to live in Japan. My mother is obsessed with their finesse and attention to detail. Everything is so precise and delicate according to her. I admit I have an affection for their obsession with robots and technology spun into Space Operas. (Being a fan of the Gundam Wing series as a kid I took all of last summer to watch the original, Mobile Suit: Gundam, and its sequel Mobile Suit Zeta from the 70s).

YMO is a group I've run into lately that seemed to be a Japanese Kraftwerk with some David Bowie vocal sounds (more on the Service album). As I went through what I could find on the internet, the Solid State Survivor album held my gaze. The cover depicts Maoist China greedily eyeing Japan, our narrator giving us a sarcastic glance. The other players (perhaps Vietnam, Hong Kong, or others) at the table are trying to play their hand while the American seductress backs China's imperialist ambitions. I feel I've seen the cover from somewhere else and read the same analysis I've come up with just now. At any rate the music, for whatever reason, depicts this story in my mind.





Listening to YMO is like a stream of music progressing from one style to another. Over a decade Haruomi Hosono explored Tin Pan Alley (I reccomend Hurricane Dorothy) to Rhumba, pop music, and all the while of course Electronica. Tighten Up (0:00-1:56, 5:39-7:40), Japanese Gentlemen Stand Up Please! and The Snakeman Show sound silly but highlighted some of the silly stereotypes of foreigners in an almost Monty Python style.

It's strange to think that techno music has something transcendent or numinous, but I grew up with it and formed my constructions of the ideal from its threads. I remember downloading Napster (way back in the 90s...more than 14 years ago -- good god) and looking up techno remixes of Dragon Ball Z and Pokemon clips. The Trunks theme remix was particularly inspiring. I don't know what it inspired me to do or think, but while listening I dream't up emotions of great pith and moment. Often scenarios of a struggle would form and the music would guide me along as its director, to find the climax and resolve.





My life is like a dance between pessimistic absurdity and bright-eyed optimism. The war continues to rage on with neither side gaining any significant advantage. Destruction reigns randomly over our lives yet we still find times where we fly in the clouds on zeppelins being caressed by the sun and wind. All the while devious minds are at work below our consciousness.

At times I just sit here and stare at the screen. There's nothing for me to do, no thoughts running through my head -- does this feeling mean I need someone to tell me what to do? Didn't I always say I'd never become that person? Wasn't I some independent free-thinker? It seems the illusion I used to hide from society's realization that I'm gay may be kindling away. Yet, at the same time I wish I could tell you more about what I dreamt in my head concerning the album cover and how I felt about The Snakeman Show.

The weeks go by and now I've finished Moonraker. Dark and silent, the cold evenings filled with air conditioning -- nauseates the senses. My mind splits. Ideas at random, living in a dream world once again. Emblazoned words with no connection. Plagued with incontinence. Back to exercise. Back to a blank slate. I'd rather not be conscious right now.

***


I think that yesterday was a crisis in my life. I finished the first part of Renouvier's second Essais and see no reason why his definition of free will — 'the sustaining of a thought because I choose to when I might have other thoughts' — need be the definition of an illusion. At any rate, I will assume for the present — until next year — that it is no illusion. My first act of free will shall be to believe in free will.


While looking out the car window passing by Carabana I thought of whether I had hit the point of no return. Is life going to simply be like this forever? It feels like the accelerated growth from puberty I had adjusted to are diminishing and flattening out my progress. Am I still the person I was throughout high school? In contemplating society’s demands on my persona I realized I can be any person I want. Yet in destroying these manacles, I realized the real me underneath it all simply could not be changed. After reading William James I see every day as the chance to effect the course of my habits. Every instance of behaviour or cognition is another instance of probability guiding my future comforts and direction.

To revitalize my life both morally and functionally, from here on out I will take on three maxims (the first two of which James referenced to Alexander Bain):

In the acquisition of a new habit, or the leaving off of an old one, we must take care to launch ourselves with as strong and decided initiative as possible. Accumulate all the possible circumstances which shall reinforce the right motives; put yourself assiduously in conditions that encourage the new way; make engagements incompatible with the old; in short, envelop your pledge with every aid you know. This will give your new beginning such a momentum that the temptation to break down as soon as it otherwise might; and every day during which a breakdown is postponed adds to the chances of its not occurring at all.


Never suffer an exception to occur till the new habit is securely rooted in your life. Each lapse is like the letting of a ball of string which one is carefully winding up; a single slip undoes more than a great many turns will wind again.


Seize the very first opportunity to act on every resolution you make, and on every emotional prompting you may experience in the direction of the habits you aspire to gain.


Thanks for reading

****
sob3k
Profile Blog Joined August 2009
United States7572 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-08-30 08:37:47
August 30 2013 08:34 GMT
#2
Your second maxim is in fact one which I believe to be very harmful to your objective.

Never suffer an exception to occur till the new habit is securely rooted in your life. Each lapse is like the letting of a ball of string which one is carefully winding up; a single slip undoes more than a great many turns will wind again.


This idea is unrealistic. The fact is that as humans, especially when trying to establish a new pattern of behavior, we will have slip ups and failures. No matter how poetically you rationalize your goal or how well you intellectually understand the negative impact of slipping back into old habits, circumstances and human weakness will eventually combine in such a way that you will fuck up. To view these inevitable missteps as the quote does, as dropping a carefully wound ball of string, is to view a single mistake as the end of your entire journey. With this mentality comes a feeling of immense defeat and an almost irresistible urge to give up on the whole endeavor at the first stumble. You will feel as though all your previous effort has come to nothing. You will feel like you must start all over again.

In reality it is much healthier to in fact perceive these occurrences as minor glitch. To examine the culmination of factors that created them, and to move on. One ruined day does not erase a hundred successes. The real tragedy is when one errant choice in a moment is allowed to mentally derail you completely from your chosen path and indeed destroy everything you have worked for. To imagine that you can abandon alcoholism or start daily exercise or change your personality, starting one day and never failing, is laughable naivety. It is your choice whether or not to view these slips as ruinous cataclysms that will make you question your mental fortitude and free will, or as simple mistakes you will not make again tomorrow.

I know personally I have been far far more successful accomplishing challenging goals with the second approach. The first is simply beating yourself to death over an inevitability. It sounds very stoic and principled on paper, but is about as practical as abstinence only sexual education.
In Hungry Hungry Hippos there are no such constraints—one can constantly attempt to collect marbles with one’s hippo, limited only by one’s hippo-levering capabilities.
Jerubaal
Profile Blog Joined June 2010
United States7684 Posts
August 31 2013 17:58 GMT
#3
Minor question: What card game do they play in Casino Royale? In the original comedic version they play Baccara, which is ridiculous, and I doubt Texas Hold'em was as popular in the 60s as it is today.
I'm not stupid, a marauder just shot my brain.
CatNzHat
Profile Blog Joined February 2011
United States1599 Posts
September 01 2013 01:24 GMT
#4
On September 01 2013 02:58 Jerubaal wrote:
Minor question: What card game do they play in Casino Royale? In the original comedic version they play Baccara, which is ridiculous, and I doubt Texas Hold'em was as popular in the 60s as it is today.

Baccarat was played in the novel
packrat386
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
United States5077 Posts
September 01 2013 04:22 GMT
#5
Hello again Roe. I still haven't had a chance to read moonraker .

I was wondering if you have read any of heidegger's writings? Your thoughts on how technology/knowing hurts the beauty of the human mind and condition sort of reminded me of some of his stuff.
dreaming of a sunny day
CFDragon
Profile Blog Joined July 2007
United States304 Posts
September 01 2013 06:59 GMT
#6
One of the biggest enemies to creativity is a fear of being wrong.
sc4k
Profile Blog Joined January 2010
United Kingdom5454 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-02 08:22:06
September 02 2013 08:20 GMT
#7
On August 30 2013 17:34 sob3k wrote:
Your second maxim is in fact one which I believe to be very harmful to your objective.

Show nested quote +
Never suffer an exception to occur till the new habit is securely rooted in your life. Each lapse is like the letting of a ball of string which one is carefully winding up; a single slip undoes more than a great many turns will wind again.


This idea is unrealistic.


But it does have a powerful truth. For going to the gym, they say quitting becomes easier each time you do it. People who let a few off days slip into their schedule often slide into completely failing to adhere to it and stop exercising altogether within a month. I have seen it happen before my eyes many times. A crack in the windscreen, if not seen to immediately, becomes a broken windscreen before long.

On September 01 2013 15:59 CFDragon wrote:
One of the biggest enemies to creativity is a fear of being wrong.


This seems very accurate. As we get older and inevitably more cynical we judge ourselves more and more harshly up til the point where we shout ourselves down before even trying.
Roe
Profile Blog Joined June 2010
Canada6002 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-03 06:08:12
September 03 2013 06:06 GMT
#8
On August 30 2013 17:34 sob3k wrote:
Your second maxim is in fact one which I believe to be very harmful to your objective.

Show nested quote +
Never suffer an exception to occur till the new habit is securely rooted in your life. Each lapse is like the letting of a ball of string which one is carefully winding up; a single slip undoes more than a great many turns will wind again.


This idea is unrealistic. The fact is that as humans, especially when trying to establish a new pattern of behavior, we will have slip ups and failures. No matter how poetically you rationalize your goal or how well you intellectually understand the negative impact of slipping back into old habits, circumstances and human weakness will eventually combine in such a way that you will fuck up. To view these inevitable missteps as the quote does, as dropping a carefully wound ball of string, is to view a single mistake as the end of your entire journey. With this mentality comes a feeling of immense defeat and an almost irresistible urge to give up on the whole endeavor at the first stumble. You will feel as though all your previous effort has come to nothing. You will feel like you must start all over again.

In reality it is much healthier to in fact perceive these occurrences as minor glitch. To examine the culmination of factors that created them, and to move on. One ruined day does not erase a hundred successes. The real tragedy is when one errant choice in a moment is allowed to mentally derail you completely from your chosen path and indeed destroy everything you have worked for. To imagine that you can abandon alcoholism or start daily exercise or change your personality, starting one day and never failing, is laughable naivety. It is your choice whether or not to view these slips as ruinous cataclysms that will make you question your mental fortitude and free will, or as simple mistakes you will not make again tomorrow.

I know personally I have been far far more successful accomplishing challenging goals with the second approach. The first is simply beating yourself to death over an inevitability. It sounds very stoic and principled on paper, but is about as practical as abstinence only sexual education.


Well if the ball of string does drop, I wouldn't just give up, I'll just have to wind it back up again. And it really depends on the behaviour. Some things will keep coming back (like sexuality) so you can't completely morph its expression. Others that don't occur naturally from your body may be better suited for this goal. It's a terrible thing to happen since it "resets" your progress. The way I understood James' writings was that one ruined day is simply one ruined day. If you had 99 excellent days and one bad, it only means the chances for that bad behaviour to reoccur is now at least 1/100. Every single instant is like a grain of thread in the fabric of our psychology. Realizing this we should use every chance we have to influence how the thread is woven. So I guess what's missing in this maxim is a way to get back to normal after your inevitable slip-ups. Of course you also have to set realistic goals. James also had his mind on morality which was made more clear later on.

On September 01 2013 02:58 Jerubaal wrote:
Minor question: What card game do they play in Casino Royale? In the original comedic version they play Baccara, which is ridiculous, and I doubt Texas Hold'em was as popular in the 60s as it is today.


I just checked (I have a stack of Bond books next to my bed) and they do in fact play Baccarat

On September 01 2013 13:22 packrat386 wrote:
Hello again Roe. I still haven't had a chance to read moonraker .

I was wondering if you have read any of heidegger's writings? Your thoughts on how technology/knowing hurts the beauty of the human mind and condition sort of reminded me of some of his stuff.


Never read anything of his, I'll look into it and put him on my birthday list since it's in a few weeks!

I just watched the start of Moonraker the movie last night as I went to bed (they had a Bond marathon going). Right off the bat it was different; the Moonraker itself being a space shuttle, Drax's men being astronauts, Drax himself not having any scars or red hair or grossness of any kind Flemming described. Ah well...

On September 01 2013 15:59 CFDragon wrote:
One of the biggest enemies to creativity is a fear of being wrong.


My heart lept at this sentence as if to tell me to remember this!
Daswollvieh
Profile Blog Joined October 2009
5553 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-05 15:59:24
September 05 2013 15:57 GMT
#9
On August 30 2013 15:07 Roe wrote:

I have this problem almost every time I write. I can think of such great ideas and such great ways to say them when I’m in bed, or in the bathroom, anywhere away from the chance of writing. When I hit the pen to paper or fingers to keyboard the words and thoughts fly right out of my head, evaporated. And I can converse with myself, have eloquent dialogue, racing with description and ingenious with forming words. Then some days I get soggy-minded and it seems the will to write (and by extension the will to live) is all gone. And with it comes depression and hopelessness, which reinforces my helplessness. Most of the time it's in what I don't write that I wish I could say, like there's something more I wish I could illustrate...


Maybe the ingenious part is merely the manic side of manic-depression.
BriMikon
Profile Joined November 2010
United States82 Posts
September 08 2013 19:59 GMT
#10
I can definitely connect with the emotions in this blog. To the OP, here is the beginning of Ralph Waldo Emerson's Self-Reliance:
I read the other day some verses written by an eminent painter which were original and not conventional. The soul always hears an admonition in such lines, let the subject be what it may. The sentiment they instill is of more value than any thought they may contain. To believe your own thought, to believe that what is true for you in your private heart is true for all men, that is genius. Speak your latent conviction, and it shall be the universal sense; for the inmost in due time becomes the outmost, and our first thought is rendered back to us by the trumpets of the Last Judgment. Familiar as the voice of the mind is to each, the highest merit we ascribe to Moses, Plato, and Milton is, that they set at naught books and traditions, and spoke not what men but what they thought. A man should learn to detect and watch that gleam of light which flashes across his mind from within, more than the lustre of the firmament of bards and sages. Yet he dismisses without notice his thought, because it is his. In every work of genius we recognize our own rejected thoughts: they come back to us with a certain alienated majesty. Great works of art have no more affecting lesson for us than this. They teach us to abide by our spontaneous impression with good-humored inflexibility then most when the whole cry of voices is on the other side. Else, to-morrow a stranger will say with masterly good sense precisely what we have thought and felt all the time, and we shall be forced to take with shame our own opinion from another.


The ability that he talks about, to detect that gleam of light within, is hindered by stress, I believe. If you find this true for you, then here is a cool Ted Talk I've learned from recently discussing stress.
"...if joyful is the fountain that rises in the sun, its springs are in the wells of sorrow unfathomed at the foundations of the Earth." -Tolkien
lamprey1
Profile Joined June 2012
Canada919 Posts
September 09 2013 09:00 GMT
#11
The Summer of George:





Please log in or register to reply.
Live Events Refresh
Next event in 4h 12m
[ Submit Event ]
Live Streams
Refresh
StarCraft 2
WinterStarcraft600
StarCraft: Brood War
firebathero 1230
Leta 567
Zeus 297
Noble 48
Icarus 8
ajuk12(nOOB) 7
Britney 0
League of Legends
JimRising 752
Counter-Strike
Stewie2K799
Other Games
summit1g10918
hungrybox284
SortOf2
Organizations
Other Games
gamesdonequick1436
BasetradeTV58
StarCraft 2
Blizzard YouTube
StarCraft: Brood War
BSLTrovo
sctven
[ Show 16 non-featured ]
StarCraft 2
• practicex 50
• Sammyuel 10
• AfreecaTV YouTube
• intothetv
• Kozan
• IndyKCrew
• LaughNgamezSOOP
• Migwel
• sooper7s
StarCraft: Brood War
• Azhi_Dahaki40
• iopq 1
• BSLYoutube
• STPLYoutube
• ZZZeroYoutube
League of Legends
• Scarra2698
• Stunt481
Upcoming Events
Esports World Cup
4h 12m
Reynor vs Zoun
Solar vs SHIN
Classic vs ShoWTimE
Cure vs Rogue
Esports World Cup
1d 5h
CranKy Ducklings
2 days
BSL20 Non-Korean Champi…
2 days
CSO Cup
2 days
BSL20 Non-Korean Champi…
2 days
Bonyth vs Sziky
Dewalt vs Hawk
Hawk vs QiaoGege
Sziky vs Dewalt
Mihu vs Bonyth
Zhanhun vs QiaoGege
QiaoGege vs Fengzi
FEL
3 days
BSL20 Non-Korean Champi…
3 days
BSL20 Non-Korean Champi…
3 days
Bonyth vs Zhanhun
Dewalt vs Mihu
Hawk vs Sziky
Sziky vs QiaoGege
Mihu vs Hawk
Zhanhun vs Dewalt
Fengzi vs Bonyth
Sparkling Tuna Cup
5 days
[ Show More ]
Online Event
5 days
uThermal 2v2 Circuit
6 days
Liquipedia Results

Completed

CSL Xiamen Invitational
Championship of Russia 2025
Murky Cup #2

Ongoing

Copa Latinoamericana 4
Jiahua Invitational
BSL20 Non-Korean Championship
Esports World Cup 2025
CC Div. A S7
Underdog Cup #2
IEM Cologne 2025
FISSURE Playground #1
BLAST.tv Austin Major 2025
ESL Impact League Season 7
IEM Dallas 2025
PGL Astana 2025
Asian Champions League '25

Upcoming

CSLPRO Last Chance 2025
ASL Season 20: Qualifier #1
ASL Season 20: Qualifier #2
ASL Season 20
CSLPRO Chat StarLAN 3
BSL Season 21
RSL Revival: Season 2
Maestros of the Game
SEL Season 2 Championship
uThermal 2v2 Main Event
FEL Cracov 2025
HCC Europe
ESL Pro League S22
StarSeries Fall 2025
FISSURE Playground #2
BLAST Open Fall 2025
BLAST Open Fall Qual
Esports World Cup 2025
BLAST Bounty Fall 2025
BLAST Bounty Fall Qual
TLPD

1. ByuN
2. TY
3. Dark
4. Solar
5. Stats
6. Nerchio
7. sOs
8. soO
9. INnoVation
10. Elazer
1. Rain
2. Flash
3. EffOrt
4. Last
5. Bisu
6. Soulkey
7. Mini
8. Sharp
Sidebar Settings...

Advertising | Privacy Policy | Terms Of Use | Contact Us

Original banner artwork: Jim Warren
The contents of this webpage are copyright © 2025 TLnet. All Rights Reserved.