Category Archives: Life

Pain in the Mouth: Real Life Interupts


Sometimes one just has to do what one has to do. Today I had the pleasure of visiting the dentist to have a crown replaced. Physically, we’re talking pain here, it is no where near as bad as having a large cavity excavated or having a new crown done.  It will still wipe me out for the rest of today and most of tomorrow. In two weeks I’ll have the temporary crown replaced with the permanent one.  Don’t know why they call them permanent when I seem to be replacing them all the time. It’s not only a pain in the mouth, but an even larger pain in the wallet.

I had fun yesterday making my new hanging books, but right now I’m not thinking well at all, so I’ll just let you enjoy the picture.

 

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Vacations and the best laid plans

I’ve been on vacation visiting a friend for the past two weeks.  I had great plans of doing a daily blog while I was there and catching up on all sorts of other computer stuff. As you can see, it just didn’t happen. I’ve been home for two days and am feeling overwhelmed by the amount of stuff (of the non-creative variety) that I have to do.  Things like paying all those bills and doing my taxes.  I don’t mind numbers type work and I love charts and graphs, but taxes and bills, just yuck!

I’m building up to a good rant on the taxes.  Not at the IRS, but at the tax software people who want to charge you more and more every year for their software.  And a little bit at the IRS and NYS who think it’s fun to charge you for making their work easier by e-filing. But not right now, too much other stuff to finish before I can have the luxury of ranting!

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The Vagaries of Memory

Yesterday I was in a car accident.  While driving down the hill near my house, I hit a patch of ice and ended up in the ditch.  However that’s not what this blog is about. It’s just the starting point.

After the car came to a stop, I have an incredibly vivid memory of looking at the dashboard and seeing the lights on it. That made me realize the engine was still running, so I reached down and switched off the ignition.  In my memory I was sitting up and the car was facing down the hill.  The problem is, that’s not what happened.  Yes, I did see the lights and I did turn off the ignition, but the car was upside down, lying on its roof, with the nose pointing up the hill.

I must have been upside down, held in place by my seat belt and there’s no way I could have seen either up or down the hill as the windshield was collapsed and smashed with the hood of the car lying on the ground.

Over the past 24 hours, I have tried many times to correct my memory by telling my brain what must have happened and the real position of my body.  My memory doesn’t care!  It stubbornly clings to the upright position.  It  fascinates me and raises a whole range of questions about memory under stress. I have always heard that eyewitness accounts can be unreliable.  Now I really understand that.

My armchair opinion is that the brain is trying to make sense of something that is nonsense and totally unfamiliar.  I always drive the car sitting up and I was going down the hill.  Driving a car upside down doesn’t make sense and is a totally new pattern, so the brain improvises and force fits what it sees into what it “should” see.

For the sake of the narrative, I was able to unfasten my seat belt and turn myself around enough to find the door handle.  Miracle of miracles, when I tried the door, it opened as easy as pie and the warning chime (keys in ignition) even went off.  Many thanks to our laws on automotive safety.  And yes, other than the expected bumps and bruises, I seem to be fine.  The car, not so much!

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