In Ancient Mesopotamia, people might have drank beer daily. I wonder if the Ancient Mesopotamians also dealt with gout too. Fascinating article. Links to a page with a how-to video and taste test.I’ve quit drinking beer — gout — and for the most part I believe abstaining from alcohol is an overall net benefit for me. But you don’t need to consume alcohol to wish good health to a fellow time traveler…. so in that spirit: Prost, Sláinte, Salud, Kampai, Tagay, geonbae, l’chaim, egészségedre, Cheers!
I experienced a procedure the other day that, by all accounts, is not comfortable and unpleasant. The professionals who supported me through the procedure did their best to treat me with dignity, and I love them for it. This is not about them…I approach, and often embrace, the weird daily. I enjoy weird ideas, points of views, and exploring weird world views. I find taboo fascinating, and I love a contrarian take. I am not accustomed to weird invasive medical procedures though… that’s a first for me… and I noticed something that helped, prostrating myself before the weird, embracing it, and welcoming it into my life with a cheerful heart.So much of life’s weirdnesses and ackwardnesses can be assuaged and cooled with a cheerful and fun loving heart. I reminded myself that eventually I will die, and to allow this weird thing to bother me is absurd. And when you embrace the absurdity of life you quickly begin to laugh and find the funny in it. Life affords so many opportunity for humor and cheer. I am thankful I find more and more opportunities daily to embrace those moments. Not only does it enhance my enjoyment of the weird, it helps others step through life a little bit less stressfully too. Life’s short.Don’t take yourself too seriously.At one point we all shit our beds, gurgled our food, got caught with our pants down, and walked over to our neighbor’s house with a proton pack on and offered to clean their homes of ghosts… what you never did that?
“Every forest is a hyperobject, an enormously complex environment that’s shaped not just by its location, landscape, and climate but also by the history of humans in that place… what you see in the woods depends on the eyes that you are see it through.” — Deb Chachra, “How Infrastructure Works: Inside the Systems That Shape Our World”When I look at the hospital system, from yesterday’s post, I see the hospital system through the lens of someone that helps business optimize their customer experiences for maximum success and revenue potential. I don’t see the system as a system administrator. When I see the forest system, I see it through the eyes of someone fascinated by how things interact with other things. When I think of humans, I think of humans through the eye of someone that’s still figuring out what it means to be his own human…. I suppose everything is a matter of perspective.
Consider that the world changes gradually.Culture and social norms don’t change overnight. It’s thought our brains process information at 10 bits per second (a fraction of your Internet speed).On net, everything usually works out. Traffic will always suck.You could always eat one less doughnut.There will always be predators, and there will always be prey.V will more often always precede I, unless you intend to deceive and go to a German Sixth chord, which is really a reverse tritone substitution (for the musicians). Seeing reality as it is and not as we hoped it would be makes reality a bit more tolerable.Most things are tolerable.Except BTS.
Dear system,At first glance, you appear optimized for patient care and respect. At second glance, I wonder if you’re optimized for billing efficiency. You make important checks that suggest you care about my privacy. You ask my birthday, you ask my address, and you ask for my name. I appreciate you thinking about my privacy and being sure you have the right patient. Thank you. You make it efficient for me to check in. I don’t fill out as much paperwork as I used to. You ask if I have different diseases, and here you fail. I, as an actor in the system, might have no idea if I have or don’t have a disease. In fact, I may be the very wrong person to make such a claim without more evidence. I recommend you adopt a mutually exclusive and comprehensively exhaustive framework to your questions and add the option: “Unknown.”You ask me to do things like leave personal items in lockers. You also let me know that you’re not responsible for my items that you do not allow me to keep on my person. Have you taken a step back to observe the obvious paradox? Last thing, when confronted with a concern about my privacy and the desire to keep valuable things on my person, your staff says things like “maybe you shouldn’t have brought that…” Here, you fail again because your system isn’t optimized for my satisfaction or success. If it was, you would call me in advance and prime me to be successful. “Hey, so you have the most successful event, here’s what we recommend and why…. oh, just so you know, at this particular location, here’s what to expect….” Imagine that. level of personalization before an event? Even though I don’t pay you directly, I am a consumer of your service. And as a consumer of your service, I believe it’s possible to optimize for my success… and success doesn’t mean satisfaction.Many customers are happy and satisfied paying nothing for service. That’s not ideal. What’s ideal is customers realizing more value than their investment and getting the outcomes they hoped for and more. Optimizing your system for maximum success ensures repeat customers, increased trust, probably less complaints (which are a cost), and (hopefully) more revenue or better margins. The tweaks are easy and obvious. Your level of commitment is the x factor. Best,David
Something about the cold converts.Outside to inside,Extroversion to introversion,Wild to peace,Active to sleep.A re-balancing of energy.Restorative.
Cows are a renewable resource — in a sense. They can regenerate, but not instantaneously — there is a delay. So you can’t erode your stock of cattle in the name of growth, nothing natural lasts forever. That’s what some Brazilian farmers are discovering:“BARRETOS, Brazil—In the dead of night at a slaughterhouse in Brazil’s southeastern farming belt, a group of men splattered in blood gathered around the entrails of a cow to see if they had hit gold.‘Just look at the size of that,’ one worker said as he pressed the animal’s flesh through a sieve to reveal a hardened dark orange lump almost as big as a golf ball, glistening under the fluorescent light.There it was: a gallstone.One of the most prized ingredients in traditional Chinese medicine, cattle gallstones have become so valuable that traders are willing to pay as much as $5,800 an ounce—twice the price of gold—for the nuggets of hardened bile.” - Samantha Pearson, of The Wall Street Journal (link)Farm hands report sifting through bloody entrails looking for gallstones. Once found, the stones are placed in a safe located in a secure backroom. I’m reminded of scenes from action thrillers where people go to secure rooms to open up some type of hazardous or precious material. For some, gallstones are that precious.A market is a system. Where there’s demand meets supply. My fear is that the high demand may cause people to seek growth opportunities at the expense of their resources. I share that same concern for the world outside of Brazil and her cows.
Family systems are interesting.Family systems self-organize multiple times. Self-organization is the process of two (or more) actors/things interacting towards a mutual goal — systems have a goal. Out of that self-organization emerges “family.” The emergence of family happens at marriage, at the arrival of offspring, or through other acts where that type of bond exists between actors — certainly some friends may regard themselves as family.The system persists through feedback loops. Balancing feedback loops may keep the actors in line and focused on a mutual goal, reinforcing loops may allow the system to continue to Communicating with one another is a form of reinforcement feedback loop. The act of actors communicating with each other through text, calls, visits, or family norms may reinforce those bonds and allow the system to persist. The system contains resources such as patience, tolerance, or love. The stock of patience may rise or fall within a family system. The stock of love may rise or fall —there’s nothing wrong with that, it’s a thing. Time may be a stock — a non-renewable stock at that. Actors, or members, of a family may be a stock. The more that enter the family, the higher the stock of people in the family system.Resources are added to or removed from the system via flows. There may not be enough patience, love, tolerance, money, or other critical resource to maintain the stock of people in a family. Perhaps a family system became too big and splintered off to sub systems? What if one member of a family committed an act so egregious or deviant that the stock of patience or tolerance for that family member became depleted; the deviant is removed from the system. Maybe factions form. If you remove the system, it’s easy to look at actors in a family and judge them. I do and have done that. You do and have done that. It makes perfect sense for a person to judge (on any gradient of harsh) the members of their family. However, if you add the concept of the system over the top, you see a different story.You see people playing their part, as boundedly rational actors, in the game that is their system. They’ are attempting to do their best. They don’t realize that the system may collapse or persist, and they may not be fully aware of how to persist it. They may only measure thru-put, how much of a thing happened, and they may not measure the stocks within the system. They may have their own goals and their goals may be different from other members of the system — creating a push and pull effect. They may all feed from the same well and use up the resources so that not one has any more resources. Nothing natural lasts forever. Families come, go, re-form, and collapse … like everything else in life. It’s natural, it’s okay, and it’s best not to judge. Simply accept and love the best you can.
The Guardian reports that Leatrice Eiseman claims that beige is a relaxing color that gives us a robust/sturdy/always-present vibe. A vibe that people, younger people, may be needing? Something dependable? “‘The economy plays into it – people are concerned about how they’re spending their money and where they’re putting it,’ says Leatrice Eiseman, the executive director of the Pantone Color Institute. ‘In the human mind, light tones like beiges are reliable – it’s the colour of the sphinx. People will often refer to the beige tones as everlasting and classic. They also associate these tones with nature, sand and stone – they’re dependable.’ Eiseman sees beige less as a trend than as a presence: ‘It’s always there’… But some find this presence a little menacing.“But while menacing to some, others are receiving signals from high status influencers to adopt the color."‘It’s a look that’s all over Instagram,’ says Isabelle Gregory, the 25-year-old owner of a beige-on-beige home in Hampshire. ‘There is a fresh and clean feel to it.’ Kim Kardashian was an early adopter, with her $60m ‘minimal monastery’ with cavernous neutral-hued spaces and scant evidence of any human habitation. Former Love Island star Molly-Mae Hague’s Molly Maison is a red wine drinker’s nightmare, while Meghan Markle’s new Netflix show, With Love, Meghan, contains a litany of beige – from personalised candles to flowers…‘People my age are really influenced by what’s on social media,’ says Gregory, who works in education. ‘And if that’s what everyone’s going for online, then that’s just what a lot of people will tend to pick up’…. Last April, the great beigification reached new heights when influencer Sydney Gifford brought legal action against fellow influencer Alyssa Sheil, alleging that Sheil had appropriated her aesthetic. Both women are evangelists of the all-neutral look; both live in a world where everything is beige and clean and shoppable via an Amazon affiliate link.“My two concerns:Influencers participate in a system that involves signal. Once they signal their trend, people click and the influencer’s message gets amplified to more people. More people see the trend catch on, perhaps they see themselves in that story and feel a social norm to endorse and/or participate in the trend. Now we have beigification. Is beige the bandaid drug-like intervenor in our system that might solve a surface-level issue but fails to address a root cause? And, are influencers well-enough aware that this stress exists and are taking advantage of our malfunctioning systems?I do not argue against beige. If people like the color, why should I get in their way. Instead, I believe it’s important to look at these trends and ask questions about what system archetypes are at play and who benefits from them… and (potentially) who doesn’t. I want us to be honest with ourselves about the tradeoffs.
As the number of members in an environment rise, the emergence of self-government takes place. From an Asterisk interview: Why We Have Prison GangsIf you look at smaller prison systems — I was recently in the South Carolina Department of Corrections — they have a much smaller prison population, and they don’t have dominant gangs like those in California. Many of the conditions are the same. They’re both places of confinement. You’re forced to go there. You can’t leave. But there are no gangs emerging in the small ones. The social order that exists in the small ones actually looks a lot like the convict code that existed when California had a smaller prison system. They’re also not as racially segregated in those smaller prisons.So each of these is consistent with a causal claim that big, diverse communities that can’t rely on official governance tend to form gangs. If you look at clan-based societies, they’re socially organized in a very similar way. And I hadn’t discovered this clan literature until I finished writing my book. But clans form when there are not strong and effective state based institutions, and when groups are large enough that they can’t rely on these informal mechanisms. So there’s a similar phenomena arising in certain times and places like we might expect.What’s interesting is that if you place an ant on a table, it’s not going to do much. However, if you place thousands of ants on a table, they’ll build a colony and begin controlling temperature.What’s more interesting, consciousness may come about the same way via neurons. As entropy rises, eventually a form of order emerges.