Archive for August, 2012

Illustrate 2012: August

Illustrate 2012: August

I consider myself a fairly independent woman.  I own my own house; I do my own renovation work; I clean out the bathroom drain when it gets clogged with hair; I used to change my own oil.  I even take care of the dead mice in my mousetraps myself.  On most accounts, I think I can safely say that I am pretty independent.  That is, of course, except for when it comes to bugs.  Nothing makes me want to run down the street screaming like a little girl with her hair on fire than bugs in my house.  Unfortunately, when you live alone, the downside to this reaction is that there’s no one left in your house to actually deal with the bug–and let’s face it, my freeloader dog certainly isn’t going to do it–so when I return from my screaming bout, the bug is, most likely, still going to be there.  Somewhere.  Even if it’s temporarily crawled away, I can be pretty sure that the sucker is just waiting for me to be lulled into complacency that its absence means it found a nicer, cleaner home to terrorize before it reappears to harass me further.

When I was growing up, the kinds of bugs we’d get in our house were generally run-of-the-mill garden spiders and those creepy zillion-leggers that run faster than Usain Bolt when you go after them.  (Thankfully, they also disintegrate into a million little pieces when you hit them with a shoe, so they’re pretty easy to kill if you can get a clean shot.  Although I will say that their post-mortem twitching legs freak me the fuck out.)  Now that I live in a city, the variety of bugs has changed.  The spiders have gone away, which is really too bad as I pretty much learned how to live in harmony with the little bug-eaters.  I now still have those zillion-leggers, but I also have cockroaches.  Not the little kind, oh no–the massive, several-inch-long kind that lumber across your living room floor just as you’re settling in to watch another episode of Downton Abbey on Netflix.  Not.  Cool.

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Why Failure Is Good for You and Your Neurons

The Thinker: Auguste Rodin

I’ve finally gotten around to reading a book that I’m pretty sure my sister gave me for either my birthday or Christmas.  Either way, it’s taken me somewhere between 8 and 11 months to get to this book, which is pretty much par for the course.  At any given time, I usually have 3-4 books going, and sometimes it can take me years to get through a book because I get distracted or just lose interest in that particular genre.  Until I finally finished it about five years ago, I had been reading On the Road since the 90′s.  We’ll see how this one pans out, but at the moment I’m on pace to finish it well before the world ends in December.  Thank goodness for that.

The book I’m reading is How We Decide by Jonah Lehrer, who, unfortunately for him, is probably now best-known for being fired by The New Yorker for fabricating facts in his recent book on Bob Dylan.  The book is all about how the brain makes decisions.  I’m not very far into it, but last night I read a passage that was–ironically, given Lehrer’s recent fate–about the importance of failure in learning.  The passage detailed a study conducted by Carol Dweck, a psychologist at Stanford, in 12 New York City Schools with more than 400 fifth-graders.  The results of the study highlighted the roles that failure and how we administer praise to students play in the learning process and our neural development.

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