Mood: Discoveries & Relevations

Fulfilment

Been questioning myself on the reasons, besides money and accountability to my parents, for taking up my present job.

Perhaps, it was the boredom of doing nothing-particularly-interesting that made me desire work ASAP. However, looking deeper, I think it must have been ego at play.

Society valuates a person’s worth according to the quantity/quality of economic contribution. In other words, I’d probably been an economic liability for the last few months, despite my personal satisfaction from learning a new language.

It never helped whenever I bumped into people that I’d not seen for months.

They’d go: “So, what have you been up to of late? Graduated? Already working?”
And I’d be: “Yeah” to the first, “no” to the second.”
Then they’d go: “Cannot find job ah
And I’d be like, “well…not exactly… Haven’t really been out searching. Learning Japanese right now….”
Then they’d look and me and go: “[short pause]… I see…”

Maybe it was sensitivity on my own part; perhaps the mildly-disapproving looks that I thought I was receiving, derived, in actuality from my own imagination. At times, I couldn’t help feeling weak and incapacitated, torn between doing what I wanted and what society expected me to. Not many people know this, but during the period of November-December, I must have been suffering from a bout of depression: I would be sitting down at home reading a book when I’d experience a wave helplessness suddenly overwhelming and choking me.

Subjects: General

Mood: Discoveries & Relevations, Philosophical Musings

Tags: career, hyperthyroid, Japanese, wanderlust, yoga

Precision Engineering

2 simply amazing minutes.

Subjects: Technology 技術

Mood: Discoveries & Relevations

Tags: animation, Honda

Transmutations

This is something fascinating that I came across while reading the December 2003 edition of Scientific American.

The cover of the magazine features 6 photographs of the facial profile of a female model. These photographs originated from the same photo source, digitally altered with only minor differences - for example, eye/hair colour, the colour of skin. If each photo were viewed separately, one might not realise that the photos are of the same person: the ‘minor differences’ influences the viewer’s decision to classify the model into different races. In one photo the model looks perfectly Japanese, in another she looks Russian.

Reading into the feature article, I discovered that the amalgam was generated with a computer tool called the Human Race Machine, that was designed by (bioart?) artist Nancy Burson. It’s quite amazing really. Apparently, all one needs to do is to sit in front of the machine and enter a few keys, while the program does the rest of the work.

The artist’s website can be found here. It’s a pity it doesn’t contain the Scientific American photographs since they are a lot more racially ambiguous than the photos in her website.

Subjects: General

Mood: Discoveries & Relevations, Philosophical Musings

Tags: bio-art, Scientific American

Was lost but now is found

This is fantastic. After a painful search, I finally found my 2 lost CDs: Jeff Beck’s Blow by Blow and The Rolling Stones Gimme Shelter CD. The irony was they were in the most obvious of places, which I should have looked at before inspecting each and every CD case in my collection.

Subjects: Music 音楽

Mood: Discoveries & Relevations

Tags: CD, found, Jeff Beck, lost, Rolling Stones

I am double jointed.