Category: noteworthy

Does BP have an ulterior motive?

Posted by – June 8, 2010

Well, as you know, BP bought all of the search words pertaining to this topic, so I’m not sure who will actually get to read this without a direct link to my blog. But here goes:

You all know about the oil spill. It’s a disgusting situation and rightfully so, everyone is very upset about all of this. (Not upset enough to stop driving their cars, but that’s a topic for another day).

The oil has been spewing out into the Gulf Coast for over 45 days. 20,000 barrels (or 840,000 gallons) per day. Scientists from all over the globe have been presenting incredible solutions to this problem (my favorite is here: http://organicjar.com/2010/2550/?awesm=fbshare.me_ANbKr), and still nothing has been done to stop, or even slow down, the oil spewing into the ocean.

There seems to be a lot of blame on the red tape surrounding the EPA and the Coast Guards, as well as a lot of talk from Obama but no action (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/ynews_pl2451).

I can remember many instances where legislation in the government, as well as decisions made in large corporations have been rushed and passed through. So why is this time different? Aren’t enough people upset? Isn’t this a disaster situation, not something that “will be taken care of at the end of the summer”?

Personally, I see a couple of ulterior motives here. Particularly with how a delay in action can be financially beneficial for BP. Obviously, if we all wait until the end of the summer to fix this, we will be at a great loss of resources. So what would they do next?

My first thought was that another war would be started to obtain more oil. But I’m not sure the American people will go for that this time.

What is more plausible is that when this is all over, BP (or maybe a different company run by the same guys) is going to come out with a new campaign towards clean energy. They are going to pretend to be sorry for their mistake and that all they want is to use wind power, or solar energy, or corn oil. Depending on how their financial situation is, they might ask for money to start the program going. All of the clean energy plants will be bought up and controlled by the same guys that got us into this mess.

We’ve had substantial clean energy options for awhile. Financially, there was never a motive before to capitalize on this market when everyone uses so much oil. Don’t you think this would be a prime opportunity for the oil companies to make themselves look good AND control new resources AND become disgustingly rich again?

Those are just my thoughts. I’m not really sure why else it would take this long to even stop the oil from spewing out. What do you think?

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Learning How to Love Your Job

Posted by – May 25, 2010

Normally, I don’t reblog other people’s thoughts and ideas. I feel that every blog should be individualized and completely unique to that person’s belief system and experiences.

But sometimes, there are exceptions. This post is from a blog that I follow called The Simple Dollar, an excellent site with ideas for being smart with your money, and simple ways to make your life in our corporate, capitalistic society more enjoyable.

This post deals with learning to love your job, something that I have been teaching myself to do lately. While I love most parts of my job, I’m not much of a business person; I find it hard to enjoy paperwork and doing taxes, etc. (That probably goes for anyone though… right?)

THE LOVE AND HATE OF WORK
I recently had a conversation with a 66 year old woman who had retired from a fairly lucrative career, only to take on a completely surprising job as her “retirement job.”

She’s a grade school lunch lady.

Why did she choose to take on such a job? The reason was simple, she told me. Her grandchildren, her grandchildren’s friends, and the grandchildren of some of her friends attended that school. She had a lot of experience working with food over the years working at soup kitchens and the like and she really wanted to put her skills to work making great meals for the little kids she cared about.
To put it simply, she loves her job. She really, really enjoys doing this, and I could tell by some of the stories she told me.

I told her that her job seemed like it could be pretty thankless – the kind of job that Mike Rowe might shadow. She thought about that for a minute and said something pretty profound.

If you hate your job, a good situation can become a bad one. If you love your job, you can turn a bad situation into a good one.

What do you do if you hate your job, I asked her. She dropped another piece of wisdom on me.

If you hate your job, stop doing the parts you don’t like and spend more time doing the parts you do like. The worst that can happen is that you get fired from a job you hate, and is that really a loss? The best that can happen is that you start producing much better work that helps you move up the food chain.

She told me that her job was to put healthy, tasty, and fun meals on the table for the kids. She knew what guidelines she had to follow and she followed the health-related ones, but she would often spend her food budget in creative ways to get healthy and fun food out there. She also didn’t “waste time” on unnecessary paperwork and meetings, stating that if there’s something important, they’ll find her in the kitchen actually doing her job.

I think every job benefits from a bit of her perspective. At my previous job, I loathed the bureaucracy and paperwork aspects of the job. Eventually, I reached a point where I pretty much ignored them until there happened to be downtime – in other words, I moved the aspects I didn’t value to the lowest possible priority. I missed a few minor deadlines, to be sure, but it made my job a lot more enjoyable and, unsurprisingly, more productive, too.

I keep this same philosophy in my writing work. If I’m not enjoying the work, I do something else, and almost always, it works. Why? Because if I move to something that’s fun within the range of stuff that I do professionally, I usually produce something great. If I grind against the boring stuff, I hate it and produce stuff that’s poor.
This is true of almost any job, from flipping hamburgers (some people are better in the kitchen and some people are better at service) to office work. If you hate your job, find out what you hate about it and do less of that. Figure out what you like about it (or at least hate less) and do more of that. You might miss out on a few details, but you’ll produce much better stuff in the areas that matter. Any boss worth his salt will see that and reward you for it (or at least overlook the little things that you miss).

I’ll leave you with one final anecdote from a friend of mine who manages a convenience store. One of her high school aged employees seemed really down, so she took him aside and asked him what the problem was. “I hate working the counter. I hate talking to all these people.” She made a deal with him – if he turned it up a notch with the other tasks, she’d take him off the counter completely. He brightened up quickly. Now, the bathrooms are spotless, the floor is mopped, the products are stocked, and the other employee working the counter is happier, too, because she likes dealing with the customers.

Everyone wins when you don’t hate your job. Find the parts you like and do more of that instead. The happier you are with your work, the better you’ll produce. If you’re worried about how it’ll go over, talk it over with your boss first, but give it a go. You’ll do better in your career, go home happier at night, and be much more likely to receive better pay.

Original article here: http://www.thesimpledollar.com/2010/05/14/the-love-and-hate-of-work/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+thesimpledollar+%28The+Simple+Dollar%29

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I was about to say, “Well, that’s a First”

Posted by – May 13, 2010

But actually, I remember this same exact thing happened in Spanish class freshman year when the teacher misheard my name

ahahahhaha I love my life.

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This is Melissa Bergen Reminding You

Posted by – May 11, 2010

The Internet is the New Television

Get off the Computer and Go Outdoors

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Posted by – May 7, 2010

Let’s suppose you were able every night to dream any dream you wanted to dream, and that you could for example have the power within one night to dream 75 years of time, or any length of time you wanted to have.

And you would naturally as you began on this adventure of dreams, you would fulfill all your wishes. You would have every kind of pleasure you could concieve.

And after several nights of 75 years of total pleasure each, you would say,

“Well, that was pretty great, but now lets umm, lets have a surprise. Lets have a dream which isn’t under control. Where something is going to happen to me that I don’t know what it’s going to be.” And you would dig that and come out of that and say “Wow that was a close shave, wasn’t it?”

And then you would get more and more adventurous and you would make further and further gambles as to what you would dream, and finally you would dream where you are now. You would dream the dream of living the life that you are actually living today.

**

Anyone else into Alan Watts nowadays?

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Without a Trace

Posted by – May 4, 2010

I’m one of those people obsessed with the past. I have an old soul. I am nostalgic.

Discontent with how things are today. Nothing feels real. As a whole, we have lost a certain human quality that many people are desperately and compulsively looking to salvage.

Can you think of anything you bought new in the past 10 years that you would want to hand down to your children / grandchildren?

My computer, camera, and cell phone are the most expensive things I own. They will be junk within 10 years. More like 5.

Even my favorite bought-new things that have a lot of sentimental value are junk. I don’t know how long they will last. And it worries me. How are we supposed to preserve anything from our generation?

Most of our books, movies, music and news will soon be all electronic. Not tangible. Not unique and treasured. Easily altered or erased. Orwell warned us.

Planned Obsolescence is ruining our opportunity to have any substantial record of this time period. Because now, everything disappears just as instantly as it arrived. We don’t have to save money for what we want. And it’s cheaper to throw it away rather than fix it. The result is that for the common person, their Urban Outfitters dress or clock from Target are far from treasured family heirlooms. Nothing can be truly earned if it is so accessible, and cannot be valued if it is more beneficial to throw it away.

Too much, too fast. What happens next? Will people 100 years from now be shopping in an antique store for plastic McDonalds toys?

I know these are just material possessions, but when everything becomes electronic or disposable, our history can be erased just as quickly.


I apologize for my jumbled thoughts, I’m trying to say something that I’m having trouble articulating

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CS4 Contact Sheet Plug-in

Posted by – April 29, 2010

::::: WARNING. NERDY POST. :::::

When I realized Photoshop CS4 left out the contact sheet plug-in, I went looking for help on the interweb.

Here’s what I found:

I use the contact sheet function in bridge as part of my workflow for creating cd covers for clients. It was a major shock for me to find it missing in cs4.

It took me a few minutes to find the bits of info needed to add this feature back into CS4 … so I thought it might be nice to spell it out for others. This is the solution that is going round the web at the moment … it worked for me.

If you don’t have the installation cd the files are also available here …

Windows: http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/pro…latform=Windows
Mac: http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/pro…tform=Macintosh

I hope this is useful.

Cheers

Jeremy


1. From the Photoshop CS4 install disc, drop the ///Goodies/Optional Plug- Ins/Automate/ContactSheetII plug-in into the //Adobe Photoshop CS4/Plug-ins/Automate folder (this is for both Contact Sheet and Picture Package).

2. From the Photoshop CS4 install disc, drop the ///Goodies/Presets/Layouts folder into the //Adobe Photoshop CS4/Presets folder and restart Photoshop.

Optional: To add this legacy functionality back into Bridge (as a menu item):

3. From the Photoshop CS4 install disc, drop the ///Goodies/Optional plugins/ Bridge Startup Scripts/photoshop_contact_sheet_ii folder and the photoshop_contact_sheet_ii.jsx file into following locations and then restart Bridge.

Macintosh: //Library/Application Support/Adobe/Startup Scripts CS4/Adobe Photoshop/

Windows XP: //Program Files/Common Files/Adobe/Startup Scripts CS4/Adobe Photoshop/

Windows Vista: //Program Files (x86)/Common Files/Adobe/Startup Scripts CS4/Adobe Photoshop/

(ORIGINAL HERE: http://luminous-landscape.com/forum/index.php?s=e8674e8bf8ed9b47d5954fe1f223224d&showtopic=28891&pid=242965&st=0&#entry242965 )

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learning to enjoy the present moment

Posted by – April 21, 2010

for years i’ve told myself

it’s okay to be nostalgic

but now
my heart needs to catch up with my home

los angeles i’m yours

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I’d Like To Keep Doing Interviews

Posted by – March 31, 2010

For The Kitchen & The Garden Patch

I’ve really been enjoying it.

If you, or someone you know, would be a good candidate, email helloATmelissabergenDOTcom

Please and Thank you.

And being vegan is not a requirement.

(See past interviews:

Brian Burke, Mastermind Behind the Cheese Crouton

My Boy, Vegan to Impress the Ladies

Grandma, Born and Raised in Beautiful Rural Vermont

Jerome, World-Traveling Veteran

Isabel, Mexican Cuisine Aficionado

Michelle, Culinary Prowess )

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Lost My Phone

Posted by – March 9, 2010

and not upset.

Brian and I have the same phone, so I’m thinking that he just took mine by accident. So I went out and bought a telephone and address book this morning.

If it turns out my phone really is lost, I couldn’t care less. I’m not even sure that I would get a new one. I feel liberated without it. The way I see it, a cell phone is just another form of addiction to technology, hiding under the guise of security and convenience.

It makes a lot of people uncomfortable to think about this

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