http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oXPgd3CiQ6Y


Sorry Share Long, I wasn't ignoring you, I've been attending a course in 
Mexico: "An
alchemists guide to quantity surveying, general relativity, scent development
and compassionate list making"; I'm presently on a break before we get
started on the next module: "The specific gravity of an ECHO".


Something that may not have come through in my previous communications is how 
much of a fan of
yours I am, I think you're one of the originals on this list; as an unrepentant
capitalist (granted, with anarchist leanings), I'm drawn to the countless forms
of human consumption (except, of course, the wasting disease kind); I see the 
truth
in "eat more", as a remedy for constipation (offered by witch doctors
to their patients), and encourage whenever possible all forms of consumption
(economic and spiritual). In short, I consider heroic consumption the Holy
Grail of what makes capitalism such a stand out system for bringing out the 
best in people.


I think your whole approach to the consumption of spiritual techniques, 
amulets, essence
oils, counselors, motivational speakers, cranial adjustments, and astrologers, 
has
more than a few legs, and may be what so many of us are looking for; not unlike
participating in Black Friday at Best Buy needs legs, if you're not going to
end up on the wrong end of the stampede.


So Share Long, I say go for it, and know you have a friend in old "grumpy 
boots", who
is watching your back with all these mono Mayan types on FFL, who wouldn't know
a true seeker from a bag of Erewhon rice: I say, why be a sniper when you can
defoliate the jungle with bullets.


And BTW, presently (changes daily) my own practice includes: mantras used in 
Aryan twelve step programs
to treat soma addiction in their pre Merv settlements, Nigerian sea foam
tourmaline light therapy, cedar ship baths, tantric techniques for sand
boarding as taught by Malikat Saba (the Queen of Sheba) in Mareb prior to her
rendezvous with Solomon, a Coptic tutor who is helping me with the discourses
of Athanasius on the short comings of the Arian heresy, fluttering visualization
of newborn glass wing butterflies, Norman Mailer's THE ARMIES OF THE NIGHT*, and
why Oprah couldn't get Lance to get real;-)**.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OyBSrBqogPY


*A Pulitzer Prize winning example of the *non-fiction novel*, (arguably, a 
genre invented by
Truman Capote with IN COLD BLOOD, please don't mention this to the Dutch
poster who believes Capote couldn't write, particularly compared to Kerouac; the
writer the Dutch poster most wants to be when he grows up---type, type, type) 
where
the author referred to himself (the protagonist) in the third person as
"Mailer"; IMO, a technique used just as effectively in ALL THE PRESIDENTS MEN.


**Instead of teaching her judo; I'm attempting to convince the daughter that 
*smiley faces* are the
canary in the coal mine of our rapid descent into illiteracy, but, after way
too long, I've figured out that smiley faces on FFL are used the way some 
lawyers
use the term "without prejudice";-). 


"All paradises, all utopias are designed by who is not there, by the people who 
are not allowed in."

-Toni Morrison





________________________________
From: Share Long <[email protected]>
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Sunday, January 27, 2013 4:28:11 AM
Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] In space no one will hear you scream. Because you 
won't.....



Salyavin, as I read this tiny muscles around the base of each hair folicle 
tensed and the hair stood up.  But that's ok because I now know that whenever 
I'm sitting, I'm also floating.  Yay!  BTW, you and Bob Price tie for Best Post 
of 2013 IMHO (-:





________________________________
From: salyavin808 <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Sunday, January 27, 2013 2:59 AM
Subject: [FairfieldLife] In space no one will hear you scream. Because you 
won't.....



20 amazing facts about the human body
Many of the most exciting discoveries in all fields of science are being played 
out in the human body


    * The Observer,  Sunday 27 January 2013
    * 

>From DNA to the atoms inside us, the human body is a scientific marvel. 
>Photograph: David Smith/Alamy
1 APPENDIX TO LIFE
The appendix gets a bad press. It is usually treated as a body part that lost 
its function millions of years ago. All it seems to do is occasionally get 
infected and cause appendicitis. Yet recently it has been discovered that the 
appendix is very useful to the bacteria that help your digestive system 
function. They use it to get respite from the strain of the frenzied activity 
of the gut, somewhere to breed and help keep the gut's bacterial inhabitants 
topped up. So treat your appendix with respect.
2 SUPERSIZED MOLECULES
Practically everything we experience is made up of molecules. These vary in 
size from simple pairs of atoms, like an oxygen molecule, to complex organic 
structures. But the biggest molecule in nature resides in your body. It is 
chromosome 1. A normal human cell has 23 pairs of chromosomes in its nucleus, 
each a single, very long, molecule of DNA. Chromosome 1 is the biggest, 
containing around 10bn atoms, to pack in the amount of information that is 
encoded in the molecule.
3 ATOM COUNT
It is hard to grasp just how small the atoms that make up your body are until 
you take a look at the sheer number of them. An adult is made up of around 
7,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (7 octillion) atoms.
4 FUR LOSS
It might seem hard to believe, but we have about the same number of hairs on 
our bodies as a chimpanzee, it's just that our hairs are useless, so fine they 
are almost invisible. We aren't sure quite why we lost our protective fur. It 
has been suggested that it may have been to help early humans sweat more 
easily, or to make life harder for parasites such as lice and ticks, or even 
because our ancestors were partly aquatic.
But perhaps the most attractive idea is that early humans needed to co-operate 
more when they moved out of the trees into the savanna. When animals are bred 
for co-operation, as we once did with wolves to produce dogs, they become more 
like their infants. In a fascinating 40-year experiment starting in the 1950s, 
Russian foxes were bred for docility. Over the period, adult foxes become more 
and more like large cubs, spending more time playing, and developing drooping 
ears, floppy tails and patterned coats. Humans similarly have some 
characteristics of infantile apes – large heads, small mouths and, 
significantly here, finer body hair.

5 GOOSEBUMP EVOLUTION
Goosepimples are a remnant of our evolutionary predecessors. They occur when 
tiny muscles around the base of each hair tense, pulling the hair more erect. 
With a decent covering of fur, this would fluff up the coat, getting more air 
into it, making it a better insulator. But with a human's thin body hair, it 
just makes our skin look strange.
Similarly we get the bristling feeling of our hair standing on end when we are 
scared or experience an emotive memory. Many mammals fluff up their fur when 
threatened, to look bigger and so more dangerous. Humans used to have a similar 
defensive fluffing up of their body hairs, but once again, the effect is now 
ruined. We still feel the sensation of hairs standing on end, but gain no 
visual bulk.
6 SPACE TRAUMA
If sci-fi movies were to be believed, terrible things would happen if your body 
were pushed from a spaceship without a suit. But it's mostly fiction. There 
would be some discomfort as the air inside the body expanded, but nothing like 
the exploding body parts Hollywood loves. Although liquids do boil in a vacuum, 
your blood is kept under pressure by your circulatory system and would be just 
fine. And although space is very cold, you would not lose heat particularly 
quickly. As Thermos flasks demonstrate, a vacuum is a great insulator.
In practice, the thing that will kill you in space is simply the lack of air. 
In 1965 a test subject's suit sprang a leak in a Nasa vacuum chamber. The 
victim, who survived, remained conscious for around 14 seconds. The exact 
survival limit isn't known, but would probably be one to two minutes.
7 ATOMIC COLLAPSE
The atoms that make up your body are mostly empty space, so despite there being 
so many of them, without that space you would compress into a tiny volume. The 
nucleus that makes up the vast bulk of the matter in an atom is so much smaller 
than the whole structure that it is comparable to the size of a fly in a 
cathedral. If you lost all your empty atomic space, your body would fit into a 
cube less than 1/500th of a centimetre on each side. Neutron stars are made up 
of matter that has undergone exactly this kind of compression. In a single 
cubic centimetre of neutron star material there are around 100m tons of matter. 
An entire neutron star, heavier than our sun, occupies a sphere that is roughly 
the size across of the Isle of Wight.
8 ELECTROMAGNETIC REPULSION
The atoms that make up matter never touch each other. The closer they get, the 
more repulsion there is between the electrical charges on their component 
parts. It's like trying to bring two intensely powerful magnets together, north 
pole to north pole. This even applies when objects appear to be in contact. 
When you sit on a chair, you don't touch it. You float a tiny distance above, 
suspended by the repulsion between atoms. This electromagnetic force is vastly 
stronger than the force of gravity – around a billion billion billion billion 
times stronger. You can demonstrate the relative strength by holding a fridge 
magnet near a fridge and letting go. The electromagnetic force from the tiny 
magnet overwhelms the gravitational attraction of the whole Earth.
9 STARDUST TO STARDUST
Every atom in your body is billions of years old. Hydrogen, the most common 
element in the universe and a major feature of your body, was produced in the 
big bang 13.7bn years ago. Heavier atoms such as carbon and oxygen were forged 
in stars between 7bn and 12bn years ago, and blasted across space when the 
stars exploded. Some of these explosions were so powerful that they also 
produced the elements heavier than iron, which stars can't construct. This 
means that the components of your body are truly ancient: you are stardust.
10 THE QUANTUM BODY
One of the mysteries of science is how something as apparently solid and 
straightforward as your body can be made of strangely behaving quantum 
particles such as atoms and their constituents. If you ask most people to draw 
a picture of one of the atoms in their bodies, they will produce something like 
a miniature solar system, with a nucleus as the sun and electrons whizzing 
round like planets. This was, indeed, an early model of the atom, but it was 
realised that such atoms would collapse in an instant. This is because 
electrons have an electrical charge and accelerating a charged particle, which 
is necessary to keep it in orbit, would make it give off energy in the form of 
light, leaving the electron spiralling into the nucleus.
In reality, electrons are confined to specific orbits, as if they ran on rails. 
They can't exist anywhere between these orbits but have to make a "quantum 
leap" from one to another. What's more, as quantum particles, electrons exist 
as a collection of probabilities rather than at specific locations, so a better 
picture is to show the electrons as a set of fuzzy shells around the nucleus.
11 RED BLOODED
When you see blood oozing from a cut in your finger, you might assume that it 
is red because of the iron in it, rather as rust has a reddish hue. But the 
presence of the iron is a coincidence. The red colour arises because the iron 
is bound in a ring of atoms in haemoglobin called porphyrin and it's the shape 
of this structure that produces the colour. Just how red your haemoglobin is 
depends on whether there is oxygen bound to it. When there is oxygen present, 
it changes the shape of the porphyrin, giving the red blood cells a more vivid 
shade.
12 GOING VIRAL
Surprisingly, not all the useful DNA in your chromosomes comes from your 
evolutionary ancestors – some of it was borrowed from elsewhere. Your DNA 
includes the genes from at least eight retroviruses. These are a kind of virus 
that makes use of the cell's mechanisms for coding DNA to take over a cell. At 
some point in human history, these genes became incorporated into human DNA. 
These viral genes in DNA now perform important functions in human reproduction, 
yet they are entirely alien to our genetic ancestry.
13 OTHER LIFE
On sheer count of cells, there is more bacterial life inside you than human. 
There are around 10tn of your own cells, but 10 times more bacteria. Many of 
the bacteria that call you home are friendly in the sense that they don't do 
any harm. Some are beneficial.
In the 1920s, an American engineer investigated whether animals could live 
without bacteria, hoping that a bacteria-free world would be a healthier one. 
James "Art" Reyniers made it his life's work to produce environments where 
animals could be raised bacteria-free. The result was clear. It was possible. 
But many of Reyniers's animals died and those that survived had to be fed on 
special food. This is because bacteria in the gut help with digestion. You 
could exist with no bacteria, but without the help of the enzymes in your gut 
that bacteria produce, you would need to eat food that is more loaded with 
nutrients than a typical diet.
14 EYELASH INVADERS
Depending on how old you are, it's pretty likely that you have eyelash mites. 
These tiny creatures live on old skin cells and the natural oil (sebum) 
produced by human hair follicles. They are usually harmless, though they can 
cause an allergic reaction in a minority of people. Eyelash mites typically 
grow to a third of a millimetre and are near-transparent, so you are unlikely 
to see them with the naked eye. Put an eyelash hair or eyebrow hair under the 
microscope, though, and you may find them, as they spend most of their time 
right at the base of the hair where it meets the skin. Around half the 
population have them, a proportion that rises as we get older.
15 PHOTON DETECTORS
Your eyes are very sensitive, able to detect just a few photons of light. If 
you take a look on a very clear night at the constellation of Andromeda, a 
little fuzzy patch of light is just visible with the naked eye. If you can make 
out that tiny blob, you are seeing as far as is humanly possible without 
technology. Andromeda is the nearest large galaxy to our own Milky Way. But 
"near" is a relative term in intergalactic space – the Andromeda galaxy is 2.5m 
light years away. When the photons of light that hit your eye began their 
journey, there were no human beings. We were yet to evolve. You are seeing an 
almost inconceivable distance and looking back in time through 2.5m years.
16 SENSORY TALLY
Despite what you've probably been told, you have more than five senses. Here's 
a simple example. Put your hand a few centimetres away from a hot iron. None of 
your five senses can tell you the iron will burn you. Yet you can feel that the 
iron is hot from a distance and won't touch it. This is thanks to an extra 
sense – the heat sensors in your skin. Similarly we can detect pain or tell if 
we are upside down.
Another quick test. Close your eyes and touch your nose. You aren't using the 
big five to find it, but instead proprioception. This is the sense that detects 
where the parts of your body are with respect to each other. It's a meta-sense, 
combining your brain's knowledge of what your muscles are doing with a feel for 
the size and shape of your body. Without using your basic five senses, you can 
still guide a hand unerringly to touch your nose.
17 REAL AGE
Just like a chicken, your life started off with an egg. Not a chunky thing in a 
shell, but an egg nonetheless. However, there is a significant difference 
between a human egg and a chicken egg that has a surprising effect on your age. 
Human eggs are tiny. They are, after all, just a single cell and are typically 
around 0.2mm across – about the size of a printed full stop. Your egg was 
formed in your mother – but the surprising thing is that it was formed when she 
was an embryo. The formation of your egg, and the half of your DNA that came 
from your mother, could be considered as the very first moment of your 
existence. And it happened before your mother was born. Say your mother was 30 
when she had you, then on your 18th birthday you were arguably over 48 years 
old.
18 EPIGENETIC INFLUENCE
We are used to thinking of genes as being the controlling factor that 
determines what each of us is like physically, but genes are only a tiny part 
of our DNA. The other 97% was thought to be junk until recently, but we now 
realise that epigenetics – the processes that go on outside the genes – also 
have a major influence on our development. Some parts act to control "switches" 
that turn genes on and off, or program the production of other key compounds. 
For a long time it was a puzzle how around 20,000 genes (far fewer than some 
breeds of rice) were enough to specify exactly what we were like. The 
realisation now is that the other 97% of our DNA is equally important.
19 CONSCIOUS ACTION
If you are like most people, you will locate your conscious mind roughly behind 
your eyes, as if there were a little person sitting there, steering the much 
larger automaton that is your body. You know there isn't really a tiny figure 
in there, pulling the levers, but your consciousness seems to have an 
independent existence, telling the rest of your body what to do.
In reality, much of the control comes from your unconscious. Some tasks become 
automatic with practice, so that we no longer need to think about the basic 
actions. When this happens the process is handled by one of the most primitive 
parts of the brain, close to the brain stem. However even a clearly conscious 
action such as picking up an object seems to have some unconscious precursors, 
with the brain firing up before you make the decision to act. There is 
considerable argument over when the conscious mind plays its part, but there is 
no doubt that we owe a lot more to our unconscious than we often allow.
20 OPTICAL DELUSION
The picture of the world we "see" is artificial. Our brains don't produce an 
image the way a video camera works. Instead, the brain constructs a model of 
the world from the information provided by modules that measure light and 
shade, edges, curvature and so on. This makes it simple for the brain to paint 
out the blind spot, the area of your retina where the optic nerve joins, which 
has no sensors. It also compensates for the rapid jerky movements of our eyes 
called saccades, giving a false picture of steady vision.
But the downside of this process is that it makes our eyes easy to fool. TV, 
films and optical illusions work by misleading the brain about what the eye is 
seeing. This is also why the moon appears much larger than it is and seems to 
vary in size: the true optical size of the moon is similar to a hole created by 
a hole punch held at arm's length.


                

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