Archive for June, 2009

Mental Pluralism [From the Archives]

My “Day I Left Pennsylvania” led me to some archived website posts (before blogs were invented) I had written many years ago. I’m re-posting them now. Bear in mind that most of the content in this series is over 5 years old. I have left the content more or less intact. I have removed some links and added some others — but that’s it. Enjoy!


Hollywood has used the idea of “multiple personality disorder” as a plot device in movies such as “Cape Fear” and “Identity.” MPD  is a general term for, I believe, a form of schizophrenia with amnesiatic barriers. Carl Jung did a lot of work with schizophrenia and also a lot of work within himself with respect to his own inner multiplicity.

At it’s core, mental pluralism (or pluralism of the mind, whatever you want to call it) essentially says that we have an assortment of different personality “shards” or “voices” in our mind. Each individual shard is a different aspect of ourselves, and represents a different way we view the world. Think of it as an inner republic — each voice would be a separate advisor on a different aspect of your life. It lacks the amnesiatic barriers of the sensationalized  ”Multiple Personality Disorder”, though, so this is not considered a pathology.

Part of utilizing mental pluralism in treatment is acknowledging and even personifying these voices — that is, giving each of them their own identity and granting them their sovereignty within your mindscape. While it sounds a little crazy, think about this: An unnamed voice in your personality will “sound” and appear to be exactly the same as any other unnamed voice; But if you can somehow identify those voices separately from one another, then you can profit from being able to hear them individually. Read the rest of this entry »

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Linux & Biking

A while back, I wrote a post about biking to work, which still stands. Having biked to work the past two days, I still agree with everything I said back then. The main difference is that now I am wearing business-attire (necktie included) at the office, and so I bike to work in a t-shirt & shorts, and change when I arrive at work. I pack a towel just to be safe (Ford Prefect would be proud!)

0013On my commute today, I was thinking about the similarities between bike commuting and using linux. It just floated into my consciousness, I swear. I’m not grabbing at straws for blog topics. :)

Anyways — the reason I thought of it is because I noticed that the freedom I feel while riding my bicycle is similar to the freedom I feel when using this open-source platform.

I know, I know, it sounds cheesy, but I mean it — there is something legitimately liberating about being able to use your computer and not feel so constrained by it. Mac users probably have an idea what I’m talking about. Bear with me here — I’ve thought about it a lot today: Read the rest of this entry »

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Conky, Avant, Cheese, and Streamer [Linux FTW]

conky
A while back my friend/co-worker Zak had installed Debian on his Dell M1530 laptop; he had this cool display on his desktop that would tell him various bits of info about his system’s current status. Stuff that’s just useful to know, sort of like checking your pulse or stepping on the scale. This software displays that kind of information every few seconds, in the background, on your desktop.

The software is called “Conky”. It’s pretty customizable, available on the Aptitude repositories, and relatively easy to setup. Below is my .conkyrc (the significance will be explained later). Read the rest of this entry »

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Day 4: Back to Work [Linux FTW]

Back to work today.

Over the past 2 days, I’ve established this laptop’s pwnage as a gaming machine (it pwns). But how does it, and more importantly, how does Linux hold up in an environment that has been more or less the domain of Microsoft (the office workplace)?

Pretty well, actually.

Today, I got my laptop’s calendar sync’d up with my Outlook calendar on my desktop. Check it:screenshot

This involved two steps, and uses gCalendar as an intermediary.

  1. Collect underp—  I mean link Evolution Calendar (Linux native) to gCal (easy!)
  2. Install Google’s Outlook/gCal sync software
  3. Profit!

In more detail, along with instructions on getting onto a VPN, Read the rest of this entry »

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