Come on Babe, Why Don’t We Paint the Town / With All That Swag

I didn’t even read your horoscope today, but I can promise you will obtain more swag soon. It is written in the stars, and in your company’s annual earnings report. You will go to a conference, a baseball game, a meeting about an annual report, a meeting about a master plan, a wedding, a bar mitzvah, a school fundraiser for your kids, a school fundraiser for your alma mater — SOMETHING. And you will come home with more swag. You know what I mean. 

Water bottles! Lanyards! Branded fleece vests you’ll never wear because they are so dorky! Branded fleece hoodies that you’ll wear even though they are dorky because wow, they’re really soft! And worst of all, most of all, the totes. THE TOTES. Don’t even get me started on the totes.

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The best place to live on the moon

the sun rises on the moon
hint: you can’t see it from here

On the moon, as on Earth, it’s about location, location, location. This year – the 50th anniversary of the first human steps on the moon – a lot of serious projects are underway to go back, and this time they want to stick around. In the past few years, it has become increasingly clear that the best place to put a crewed base is the lunar south pole. Its mountain peaks spend so much of their time dazzled by blinding sunshine that they are infomally called the Peaks of Eternal Light. Their location is not only crucial for generating solar power, but they sit next to craters in permanent shade, where water is stashed away in ice. This is prime real estate.

So it came as no surprise when in April, China announced plans to snaffle that spot. That could raise some interesting property disputes: China surely won’t be the last or only nation to build a lunar base. And neither will nation states be the only ones looking to plant flags – Jeff Bezos recently joked (?) that he wouldn’t be opposed to building an Amazon fulfillment center on the moon. [side note I saw that coming here]

As big and empty as the moon is, there won’t be a huge amount of space for all these interests to spread out. Thanks to the moon’s desolate geography and 14-day night, the usable area for settlements is actually pretty sparse – the solar peaks aren’t just the best spots, they’re pretty much the only spots.

However, in his recent book Red Moon, science fiction god author Kim Stanley Robinson offers another, much more intriguing option, which could significantly expand the moon’s real estate market. And it is not necessarily science fiction.

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My Evil Octopus

“The Kraken, as seen by the eye of imagination” – Gibson, J. (1887), Wikimedia commons

When I was a teenager, I started writing letters to myself, sealing them, and promising not to open them until a few weeks later. This is how I trained myself not to act on the suicidal thoughts I started having around 11 – the same year I got my period, and around the same age a pediatrician wrote me a prescription for Prozac. If I could wait until it was time to open the letter, something worth waiting for almost always happened.

I’ve always felt embarrassed about those letters, and ashamed of being such an angsty teenager. There were extenuating circumstances –specifically, a non-cancerous brain tumor that messed with my moods and made me lactate (fun!) — but it was nothing worse than what many teens deal with. Why couldn’t I have channeled my emotions into a vigorous sport like soccer (I could barely run the mile) or made friends (too tired and sad) or for God’s sake learned some math?

As I’ve researched a story I’m writing on suicide, however, my feelings toward my younger self have softened. For one thing, it turns out my suicidal thoughts arrived on schedule. In American teenagers, 11 years old — the onset of puberty in many girls these days– is a pretty standard age for suicidal ideation to begin. Researchers estimate that about around 20 percent of teenagers think about suicide, although only a small fraction of teens make an attempt.

Also, it turns out letter writing was a pretty clever trick. Expressing feelings in words engages the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, a brain region involved in cognitive reappraisal. Cognitive reappraisal is reinterpreting a negative event in a more positive light. It’s the mental transition from “he dumped me, my life is over,” to “he dumped me, but there’s good reason to believe I will survive.” It’s the difference between “I feel awful – I will feel like this forever” and “I feel awful – let’s get a good night’s sleep and see how tomorrow goes.”

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Dioramas Return, With Teensy Inhabitants

When the old mammal hall closed at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, it was the end of an era at the museum. The museum’s mammal dioramas were of the old school, displaying the stuffed mammals in their environments. They were in a dark, low-ceilinged part of the museum, and I almost always walked past them at full speed on the way to either the ocean hall or the bathroom. When the new mammal hall opened in 2003, it was sleek, high-ceilinged and airy, and the taxidermied mammals reclined and leapt against white backgrounds to tell a story about evolution.

Evolution is a darn good story, and the mammals look great. And I certainly wouldn’t know of the existence of the pink fairy armadillo if the exhibit hadn’t been redone.

But I have a deep fondness for dioramas. And I’m here to bring you good news: The museum has a whole new batch of dioramas. They are tiny and adorable and I wanted to live inside them. Or I would have, if there hadn’t been so many terrifying predators around.

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Can You Hear Me Now Question Mark

The words you are reading have been typed by my own fingers, pressing little keys that make letters on my screen. If you really want to get into it, my keyboard is a little bit dirty. I don’t clean it often enough, and my kids use it a lot (I tell them to wash their hands, but who knows?). One time I spilled a smoothie on it. The smoothie was purple. Actually, that might have been a different dirty keyboard.

234567890-qwertyuityuuiop[uiop[]\\\\\\\\\\

Whoops. That was me trying to clean off my keyboard with a baby wipe. Also, all the documents on my computer flew away from each other, Spotlight search came up, and Spotify started playing “Heartbeat” by Matt Kearney, and then quickly switched to “Almost (Sweet Music)” by Hozier. I left the Hozier song playing and looked at my keyboard. It was still kind of disgusting.

I’m telling you this because this week I tried to give up my dependence on my keyboard, and in particular, the tiny keyboard on my phone. I had been talking with a friend recently about voice texting. She said that she has friends who can voice text so quickly that it sounds like another language.

I have never gotten into voice texting. I’ve never gotten into voice anything. Maybe because I tried it too early on. My dad, a lawyer who after retirement had a habit of picking up odd jobs—walking a great Dane, becoming a Guy Friday for a startup business—also answered a want ad for a product tester for a new voice dictation program. This was the early 1990s, and the program was called DragonDictate. He spent hours in his office, trying to speak…slowly…to his computer.

He tried to rope my brother and me into this effort. He even offered to pay us to talk to his computer, so it could start to learn more words and different voices. I only lasted an hour. It was too uncomfortable to hear my stilted voice, too frustrating to see the mixed-up sentences that blinked back at me. Too difficult to change my speaking style, which is the opposite of clear, loud, and precise.

I do wish my dad could see—or hear—how talk-to-type has taken off. In honor of Father’s Day, I thought I should try it myself, and so I made a deal with my friend that I would only text her by voice this week. Continue reading

Where Should Research Chimps Grow Old?

This post originally ran November 22, 2016.

In 2015, the National Institutes of Health announced the end of invasive chimpanzee research in the US. The agency had dramatically scaled back the program in 2013, and NIH director Francis Collins reported that due to lack of demand, he had decided to allow the remaining animals to retire as well. “It is clear that we’ve reached a tipping point,” he wrote. “I have reassessed the need to maintain chimpanzees for biomedical research and decided that effective immediately, NIH will no longer maintain a colony of 50 chimpanzees for future research.”

Collins explained that all NIH-owned chimps would be transferred to Chimp Haven, a chimpanzee sanctuary in Louisiana, “as space is available and on a timescale that will allow for optimal transition of each individual chimpanzee with careful consideration of their welfare, including their health and social grouping.”

But enacting that plan has proven more difficult than anticipated. According to a 2016 report from the Government Accountability Office, as of January, Chimp Haven housed less than a third of all the chimps owned or supported by NIH. Part of the problem is space. The facility can only accommodate about 230 animals. But there’s another, thornier issue: Not everyone agrees that Chimp Haven is the best place for these apes to spend their golden years.

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I Don’t Like Parenting

This post was originally published on September 3, 2018

I have a confession to make. I’m worried that I don’t like parenting.

Don’t get me wrong, I like being a parent. And I definitely love my kid. I like hanging with my family, grilling dinner, listening to my son babble incoherently as my wife giggles and pretends to understand. But the actual work of child-rearing, I don’t know that I like it.

There’s the potty training, sleep training, diaper changing, life changing, sick kid, then sick wife and sick me right afterwards. There is screaming and whining and spilling and peeing in the wrong places. Weekend mountaineering adventures have turned to two-hour trips to a pond that take two more hours to prepare and clean up after.

And playing with my child isn’t what I expected either. When I imagined playing with my son, I envisioned throwing a baseball, wrestling, teaching him to rock climb. But my kid can barely catch a rubber ball thrown from five feet away, let alone shag fly balls.

And the worst thing is that I know I have it so much easier than many parents. He doesn’t have any intellectual or physical disabilities, he’s mostly calm and obedient, has an amazing smile, sleeps through the night and just wants to to hug his daddy all the time. It’s like someone programmed him on “Beginner Parent, Level One.” I really should be enjoying this. So what’s the deal?

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Designed with today’s fast-paced world in mind

A poem

composed entirely

of excerpts from press releases for CBD products

More than 20 years of experience at the pulse of the global health and wellness industry–

My two passions: spreading the word about CBD and caring for my beloved dogs.

We put our products into service by integrating bodywork, esthetics, yoga and other therapeutic modalities.

What is CBD? Will CBD get me high? Is using CBD a sin?

These are a just a few questions Christians around the country are asking themselves.

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