Quote :: Doing The Part We Enjoy

I actually do this a lot.  I try to minimize the pain I have with any task I have to do. This means  exchanging merienda/lunch so that I don’t have to go through the trudgery of testing some bits of code that I find extremely boring.  This is what we should do. Find the happy bits in our life and maximize the fun. Sometimes this means finding a new job, sometimes this means letting go of some of the comforts we enjoy, sometimes this means having to take less money (ehem), sometimes this means taking on bigger more challenging projects (ehem), and it obviously means knowing yourself and being flexiblre about yourself enough to be able to change and to be able to be inflexible.
Most everything about happiness in this life is about knowing oneself, controlling for the fear and want for comfort we have that is preventing us from doing what would make us happy. This blindness is the blindness of fear and the least action. If we can get through this hump, this fear I believe this is the easy 80% of happiness we get if happiness obey’s the Pareto Principle.

Ah, we all think we get paid to be brilliant, funny thing is that we usually enjoy the stuff we are brilliant at.
It’s the drudgery that exacts its price on our souls.
Wouldn’t we all take a pay cut if it allowed us to only do the bits of our job that we enjoyed? I would.

-Hugh McLeod of GapingVoid.com


Quote::The Case Against Credentialism – James Fallows

Wow we are being penalized for our reliability.  I have a strange feeling that data analyst / programmer / consultant would be closer to doctors/lawyers than engineers.

The newly organizing groups could call themselves professions, and not simply resurrected medieval guilds, because their members’ mastery of a new body of knowledge gave them claims to a competence beyond the amateur’s reach. Doctors could take advantage of the new breakthroughs in germ theory and anesthesia, engineers of refinements in industrial technology. “A strong profession requires a real technical skill that produces demonstrable results and can be taught,” a sociologist named Randall Collins wrote in a history of educational credentials. “the skill must be difficult enough to require training and reliable enough to produce results. But it cannot be too reliable enough to produce results. But it cannot be too reliable, for then outsiders can judge work by its results.” Indeed, when historians try to explain why engineers have never become as pretigious and independent as doctors or lawyers, one of their answers is that the engineer’s competence is too clearly on display. (When a patient dies, the doctor might not to be blame, but if a bridge, falls down, the engineer is.)
via The Case Against Credentialism – James Fallows.

Quote::The Introvert's Corner blog: "We Gotta Fight for our Right Not to Party" Boing Boing

I think people around me find this hard to believe but for introverts like me social interactions are welcome but are extremely taxing on our strengths and psyches. It really takes great effort to interact. I hope not a lot of people think that I’m some kind of snob.

The Introvert’s Corner blog: “We Gotta Fight for our Right Not to Party”

By Mark Frauenfelder at 2:21 PM February 17, 2010

As a semi-introvert, I was happy to discover Sophia Dembling’s Introvert’s Corner blog.
A woman who read one of my essays on introversion said that when she explained her introversion to her family, her brother said, “We didn’t know you were an introvert. We thought you were just a bitch.”The Introvert’s Corner: How to live a quiet life in a noisy world
via The Introvert’s Corner blog: “We Gotta Fight for our Right Not to Party” Boing Boing.

Quote::the ‘die trying’ print | gapingvoid

see the pic at the linked site!
Love this quote!!!

Of course, once people saw this cartoon, I got a lot of people saying, “Hugh, you should make that into a t-shirt. I’d wear one!”
Eh. I don’t do t-shirts. Too much hassle. Learned that a long time ago…
Still, it’s a nice idea. One thing I know about me and my audience, is that we’re not interested in doing stuff just for the paycheck. We’re trying to do stuff that matters, even if it kills us…
via the ‘die trying’ print | gapingvoid.

Quote:: "It's about finding these two broken pieces in life…and putting them back together again."::Experimental Theology

And if that is what sin is, all these sharp broken pieces cutting each other, then salvation is trying to put those pieces back together again. When you pick up your litter. That is salvation. When you befriend a lonely kid at school. That is salvation. When you praise God rather than curse him. That is salvation. When you forgive people, yourself included. That is salvation.

Salvation isn’t just about ‘going to heaven.’ It’s about finding these two broken pieces in life, wherever you find them, and putting them back together again. That is salvation.”

via Experimental Theology: “It’s about finding these two broken pieces in life…and putting them back together again.”.

Quote:: Finding God

God is an elusive creature. If you’re seeking Him, you’ll probably have more luck in small places- like smelling a flower, or a child’s smile, for example, than waiting around for the big BOM BOM BOM moments to arrive. That’s just been my experience.

This was from Gaping Void’s mailing list. gaping void here.

Quote:: The Blog: RIP Privacy and Identity Synthesis on the Web::Ben Casnocha

Bottom Line: Young people continue not to care about privacy out the gate. More and more older people view the loss of privacy in a cost-benefit framework and support increased transparency. And “identity synthesis” will drive internet users to require fewer formal online profiles and broader general consistency in how they are portraying themselves on the web.
via Ben Casnocha: The Blog: RIP Privacy and Identity Synthesis on the Web.