Author Topic: Anything  (Read 491865 times)

Certain Hope

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Re: Anything
« Reply #1140 on: May 07, 2008, 07:49:30 PM »
((((((((Sela))))))) I'm glad to read you... and very glad that you got some  :lol: out of the isodopes  :D

Turnips and horseradish, eh?  Wow! Well, that combo sure oughtta cure what ails ya... hehe.
I'm just growing posies this year, but having a blast getting them into the soil and scattered around the yard... including numerous hanging baskets.
Between the flowers and the birds, there's an abundance of color in our yard... and I love it!

Quote
"Whether you think you can or you think you can't, you're right!"

Henry Ford.


yep.  seems to work that way for me.  Anyone?

Definitely. It's amazing how many accomplishments I used to think were impossible for me... and truly, they were... but that's not the case any longer!
Perspective is not just a part of the battle... it's ALL of it, imo.

Keep up that good, strong and sound thinking, woman  :)

Love,
Carolyn


Leah

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Re: Anything
« Reply #1141 on: May 11, 2008, 04:24:10 PM »

Thank you ((((((( Sela )))))))

Gardening has been my life-long passion and No.1 hobby.

"morning glory" in lovely shade of blue ~ and your golden smiling "sunflowers" --  I can happily picture.

All the very best with the Horseradish and Turnip crop yield!

Enjoy your garden   :)

Love, Leah
Jun 2006 voiceless seeking

April 2008 - "The Gaslight Effect" How to Spot & Survive by Dr. Robin Stern - freedom of understanding!

The Truth About Abuse VIDEO

Sela

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Re: Anything
« Reply #1142 on: May 11, 2008, 09:58:40 PM »
Very glad to read you too Carolyn.  And thankyou for saying such nice things about me.  I'm sure you are a good, strong, sound thinking woman and then some.  Yes, perspective.  Attitude too eh?

Oh your hanging pots will be lovely!   And the birds!!

A robin has built her nest under our "stoop".  Poor thing.  It's quite protected underneath, tucked away in an unseen corner except the dogs love to tramp out there and stand directly ontop and bark, and the rest of us kept hanging the laundry out, until we figgered out she was there.  It's a wonder poor mamma keeps coming back but she's wise and very brave.  She sits on the fence and gives us heck until it's finally safe to bring the worms in.  And her wee chicks are chirping up a storm until she gets to them.  What a wonder nature is!

Leah, It's a great passion to have! 

A few of quotes:

Quote
Where flowers bloom so does hope.
-  Lady Bird Johnson, Public Roads: Where Flowers Bloom



Quote
What grows in the garden, so lovely and rare?
Roses and Dahlias and people grow there.
-   From the TV show A Gardener's Diary



Quote
Who can estimate the elevating and refining influences and moral value
of flowers with all their graceful forms, bewitching shades and combinations
of colors and exquisitely varied perfumes?  These silent influences are
unconsciously felt even by those who do not appreciate them consciously
and thus with better and still better fruits, nuts, grains, vegetables and
flowers, will the earth be transformed, man's thought refined, and turned
from the base destructive forces into nobler production.  One which will
lift him to high planes of action toward the happy day when the Creator
of all this beautiful work is more acknowledged and loved, and where man
shall offer his brother man, not bullets and bayonets, but richer grains,
better fruit and fairer flowers from the bounty of this earth.
-   Father George Schoener (1864 -1941),    The Importance and Fundamental Principles of Plant Breeding


May we all enjoy our gardens!

Sela

Leah

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Re: Anything
« Reply #1143 on: May 12, 2008, 06:15:26 PM »
((((( Sela )))))

I love your garden quotes, thank you so much for sharing them.


Beautiful and graceful, varied and enchanting, small but approachable, butterflies lead you to the sunny side of life.  And everyone deserves a little sunshine. 

~ Jeffrey Glassberg



Hoping your garden is filled with beautiful butterfiles.

Love, Leah

« Last Edit: May 12, 2008, 06:17:55 PM by LeahsRainbow »
Jun 2006 voiceless seeking

April 2008 - "The Gaslight Effect" How to Spot & Survive by Dr. Robin Stern - freedom of understanding!

The Truth About Abuse VIDEO

teartracks

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Re: Anything
« Reply #1144 on: June 08, 2008, 02:33:28 PM »


Hi everyone,

I'm including myself in the crowd, so please don't flog me.  The longer I live the more I become aware of the perception we have of the vastness and importance of our damned egos.  When it's all said and done, we are as the grass of the field.  Pretty much here today and gone tomorrow.  Not only that, but in a universe where it is believed there are at least ten dimensions, we live in three spatial dimensions.  We inhabit those three dimensions for 60, 70, 80 or so years constantly grazing on whatever promises to puff up our fragile egos and if we don't find it we have a hissy fit.  What gives?  The following doesn't explain what gives, but it, I think,  might give a little broader perspective to our existence and calm down our frantic search to inflate the old ego.  Am I way off?  I don't know.  I am as usual, just thinking...

tt

PS  I am a God follower, so I believe that when I die, there is more, perhaps added dimensions.  I believe that slaying the ego (pride) and embracing humility is the main purpose of my existence in this 3D period.  I don't feel it is for naught.  I'm just thinking, OK?

Imagining Other Dimensions
by Rick Groleau
 

   
The Elegant Universe

For most of us, or perhaps all of us, it's impossible to imagine a world consisting of more than three spatial dimensions. Are we correct when we intuit that such a world couldn't exist? Or is it that our brains are simply incapable of imagining additional dimensions—dimensions that may turn out to be as real as other things we can't detect?

String theorists are betting that extra dimensions do indeed exist; in fact, the equations that describe superstring theory require a universe with no fewer than 10 dimensions. But even physicists who spend all day thinking about extra spatial dimensions have a hard time describing what they might look like or how we apparently feeble-minded humans might approach an understanding of them. That's always been the case, and perhaps always will be.



 From 2-D to 3-D 

An early attempt to explain the concept of extra dimensions came in 1884 with the publication of Edwin A. Abbott's Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions. This novel is a "first-person" account of a two-dimensional square who comes to appreciate a three-dimensional world.

The square describes his world as a plane populated by lines, circles, squares, triangles, and pentagons. Being two-dimensional, the inhabitants of Flatland appear as lines to one another. They discern one another's shape both by touching and by seeing how the lines appear to change in length as the inhabitants move around one another.

One day, a sphere appears before the square. To the square, which can see only a slice of the sphere, the shape before him is that of a two-dimensional circle. The sphere has visited the square intent on making the square understand the three-dimensional world that he, the sphere, belongs to. He explains the notions of "above" and "below," which the square confuses with "forward" and "back." When the sphere passes through the plane of Flatland to show how he can move in three dimensions, the square sees only that the line he'd been observing gets shorter and shorter and then disappears. No matter what the sphere says or does, the square cannot comprehend a space other than the two-dimensional world that he knows.

Only after the sphere pulls the square out of his two-dimensional world and into the world of Spaceland does he finally understand the concept of three dimensions. From this new perspective, the square has a bird's-eye view of Flatland and is able to see the shapes of his fellow inhabitants (including, for the first time, their insides).

Armed with his new understanding, the square conceives the possibility of a fourth dimension. He even goes so far as to suggest that there may be no limit to the number of spatial dimensions. In trying to convince the sphere of this possibility, the square uses the same logic that the sphere used to argue the existence of three dimensions. The sphere, now the shortsighted one of the two, cannot comprehend this and does not accept the square's arguments—just as most of us "spheres" today do not accept the idea of extra dimensions.



 From 3-D to 4-D 

It's difficult for us to accept the idea because when we try to imagine even a single additional spatial dimension—much less six or seven—we hit a brick wall. There's no going beyond it, not with our brains apparently.

Imagine, for instance, that you're at the center of a hollow sphere. The distance between you and every point on the sphere's surface is equal. Now, try moving in a direction that allows you to move away from all points on the sphere's surface while maintaining that equidistance. You can't do it. There's nowhere to go—nowhere that we know anyway.

The square in Flatland would have the same trouble if he were in the middle of a circle. He can't be at the center of a circle and move in a direction that allows him to remain equidistant to every point of the circle's circumference—unless he moves into the third dimension. Alas, we don't have the four-dimensionsal equivalent of Abbott's three-dimensional sphere to show us the way to 4-D. (In mathematics, moving into ever higher dimensions is a walk in the park. See Multidimensional Math.)



 How about 10-D? 

In 1919, Polish mathematician Theodor Kaluza proposed that the existence of a fourth spatial dimension might allow the linking of general relativity and electromagnetic theory. The idea, later refined by the Swedish mathematician Oskar Klein, was that space consisted of both extended and curled-up dimensions. The extended dimensions are the three spatial dimensions that we're familiar with, and the curled-up dimension is found deep within the extended dimensions and can be thought of as a circle. Experiments later showed that Kaluza and Klein's curled-up dimension did not unite general relativity and electromagnetic theory as originally hoped, but decades later, string theorists found the idea useful, even necessary.

The mathematics used in superstring theory requires at least 10 dimensions. That is, for the equations that describe superstring theory to begin to work out—for the equations to connect general relativity to quantum mechanics, to explain the nature of particles, to unify forces, and so on—they need to make use of additional dimensions. These dimensions, string theorists believe, are wrapped up in the curled-up space first described by Kaluza and Klein.

To extend the curled-up space to include these added dimensions, imagine that spheres replace the Kaluza-Klein circles. Instead of one added dimension we have two if we consider only the spheres' surfaces and three if we take into account the space within the sphere. That's a total of six dimensions so far. So where are the others that superstring theory requires?

It turns out that, before superstring theory existed, two mathematicians, Eugenio Calabi of the University of Pennsylvania and Shing-Tung Yau of Harvard University, described six-dimensional geometrical shapes that superstring theorists say fit the bill for the kind of structures their equations call for. If we replace the spheres in curled-up space with these Calabi-Yau shapes, we end up with 10 dimensions: three spatial, plus the six of the Calabi-Yau shapes, plus one of time.

If superstring theory turns out to be correct, the idea of a world consisting of 10 or more dimensions is one that we'll need to become comfortable with. But will there ever be an explanation or a visual representation of higher dimensions that will truly satisfy the human mind? The answer to this question may forever be no. Not unless some four-dimensional life-form pulls us from our three-dimensional Spaceland and gives us a view of the world from its perspective. 
 
« Last Edit: June 08, 2008, 04:00:50 PM by teartracks »

Certain Hope

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Re: Anything
« Reply #1145 on: June 08, 2008, 02:49:57 PM »
:)

Thanks, tt.

Good thinkin, I think! Really helps in allowing all hogwash to follow the duck's back path.

Love,
Carolyn

Leah

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Don't Quit
« Reply #1146 on: June 14, 2008, 04:50:32 PM »


Don’t Quit

When things go wrong as they sometimes will,
When the road you’re trudging seems all up hill,
When the funds are low and the debts are high,
And you want to smile, but you have to sigh,
When care is pressing you down a bit,
Rest if you must, but don’t you quit.

Life is queer with its twists and turns,
As everyone of us sometimes learns,
And many a failure turns about,
when he might have won had he stuck it out;
Don’t give up though the pace seems slow,
You may succeed with another blow.

Success is failure turned inside out,
The silver tint of the clouds of doubt,
And you never can tell how close you are,
It may be near when it seems so far;
So stick to the fight when you’re hardest hit,
It’s when things seem worse,
that you must not quit.



I do so appreciate this reminder.

Love to ALL

Leah

Jun 2006 voiceless seeking

April 2008 - "The Gaslight Effect" How to Spot & Survive by Dr. Robin Stern - freedom of understanding!

The Truth About Abuse VIDEO

CB123

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Re: Anything
« Reply #1147 on: June 16, 2008, 09:46:02 AM »
TT-

I LOVE this.  Playing tricks on my mind is one of my favorite activities! :D

I really think this is true.  We are so small in our perceptions.  (And you're right--so ego-driven).

I don't even care if I ever understand this--or ever see a time when it is understood.  I just like it that there is a mystery surrounding us that is bigger than we can imagine.

Much love
CB

When they are older and telling their own children about their grandmother, they will be able to say that she stood in the storm, and when the wind did not blow her way -- and it surely has not -- she adjusted her sails.  Elizabeth Edwards 2010

teartracks

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Re: Anything
« Reply #1148 on: June 16, 2008, 05:27:11 PM »




Hi Carolyn,

Thanks.  Encouraging words of wisdom indeed. 

tt

CB,

First I want to say how good it is to see you posting again and with wisdom I've grown to trust.  I'm glad you thought the article had value.

tt






Sela

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Re: Anything
« Reply #1149 on: June 23, 2008, 10:55:22 PM »
Hi all,

Rec'd this in an email and thought I'd share it.   I wish you all enough.

Sela




I wish you enough

I wish you enough sun to keep your attitude bright no matter how gray the day may appear.       

I wish you enough rain to appreciate the sun even more.

I wish you enough happiness to keep your spirit alive and everlasting.

I wish you enough pain so that even the smallest of joys in life may appear bigger.

I wish you enough gain to satisfy your wanting.

I wish you enough loss to appreciate all that you possess.

I wish you enough hellos to get you through the final good-bye.


Certain Hope

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Re: Anything
« Reply #1150 on: June 23, 2008, 11:21:14 PM »
(((((((Sela))))))) that is beautiful.

I wish for you enough, too... enough peace to enjoy each day as the gift it is.


Love,
Carolyn

Certain Hope

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Re: Anything
« Reply #1151 on: June 24, 2008, 12:31:19 PM »
Here's one from an old plaque hanging on the wall here:

Time Is ~

Too Slow for those who Wait.

Too Swift for those who Fear.

Too Long for those who Grieve.

Too Short for those who Rejoice.

But for those who Love.....

Time is Eternity.

             by Henry Van Dyke



Sela

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Re: Anything
« Reply #1152 on: June 27, 2008, 02:56:47 PM »
Thankyou for that beauty too Carolyn!!
I count you amoung those who love.


Well, I'm off to our cabin for a nice, long w/e.  I plan on doing very little and loving every minute of it (it's supposed to rain most of the w/e but that's ok because if it's going to rain, it'll rain here too, so I might as well be where it's quiet, where I can relax without guilt and where I can appreciate the lovely scenery).

Going off to enjoy some peace!!

Wishing you all that same peace, be it here or anywhere else......everywhere, that is.

 :D Sela

Certain Hope

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Re: Anything
« Reply #1153 on: June 27, 2008, 04:56:20 PM »
(((((((Sela)))))) I believe the same about you. Thank you.

It's pretty peaceful over here in my neck of the woods  :D

So glad you'll be soaking up the cabin, the view, and all that accompanies a break from the goofy-zone.

More hugs, with love,
Carolyn

Certain Hope

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Re: Anything
« Reply #1154 on: June 28, 2008, 11:51:40 AM »
~ Let Go, My Child ~
 
   
       
   
 As children bring their broken toys

with tears for us to mend,

I brought my broken dreams to God

because He is my friend.



But then instead of leaving Him

in peace to work alone,

I hung around and tried to help

with ways that were my own.



At last, I snatched them back again and cried,

"How can you be so slow?"

"My child," He said, "What could I do?

You never did let go."