Thursday 31 July 2014

Placebo Effect & The LSD Prank




Placebo Effect & The LSD Prank by Omar Cherif, One Lucky Soul
 
“If the Thinker thinks “holy water” from Lourdes will cure its lumbago, the Prover will skilfully orchestrate all signals, from the glands, muscles, organs, etc. until they have organised themselves into good health again.”
— Robert Anton Wilson, Prometheus Rising



Along with meditation, neuroplasticity, intuition and psychedelics, the Placebo Effect is one of the various mind-over-matter topics investigated in my book. The following is a related joke, which we can now call an experiment that my friends and I took part in when we were about 20-years old.


One night, we were a total of five people and we were going to a friend’s house. Having always been a prankster, I convinced my buddies to pretend that we are all tripping on LSD. Once in the house, we started to act tripping and happened to do quite a good job.

The next step was sharing the fake stuff with our friend. So I asked him for scissors, hid a pack of cigarettes in my pocket, and headed to the bathroom. I then took the side carton we often used for joint tips when the two upper ones were gone and cut it up to many square ‘hits’ and put two on my tongue before going out to join the group. I stuck my tongue out for my unwary friend to see, pretending that it’s my fifth hit for the night ― something I could have done. And then gave him two. 



The guy bought the whole ridiculous act. I remember him going to my friends and telling them to stop me from taking any more because I will really lose my head. We were pretty convincing. In his defence, however, there was also a psychological aspect to it; for all of us did psychedelics at the time while I was known to love LSD in particular. There was no legitimate reason to doubt such a night. Let alone doubting five of your close friends who are indeed acting trippy just as well. Oh boy.

One of us would start with some fake laughter then when we make eye contact and remember that our buddy truly got deep into it, so we start laughing for real, and then he joins in. This psychedelic loop kept repeating itself for what seemed like a long time. Just as if we were up there on acid.

We spent a few hours at his place; smoking up, acting up, and having lots of wicked fun. Then at some point we all went home except one who was spending the night at our friend. His excuse that he will be going to bed by 5 am is that he took some Rohypnol (Flunitrazepam) which were big in Egypt in the 80s and 90s when people took them recreationally, not as a date-rape tool.

Little did I know, but our ‘tripping’ friend stayed up till the next morning. He actually called me home by noon, sharing that when he looks at himself in the mirror he can see his face in black and white. He was absolutely convinced that he had a psychedelic experience the night prior. And I kept playing along. Yep.

Note that this is someone who has done acid as well as other psychedelics and different drugs before. And though I wouldn’t call him a psychonaut, he knows well what they are as he has visited the magical realm multiple times. However, aided by our little skit, the power of suggestion and the placebo effect here made his mind and body believe that he was tripping, inciting them both to act accordingly.

The remarkable thing is that a week later, I could not shut up and was too excited to see my friend's reaction once he would find out. So I decided to tell him about the farce. Four of us original five were there, but he would not believe me or them. He had then concluded that it wasn’t the strong type, though it was indeed LSD. Well. I sincerely tried to convince him but he wouldn’t listen, so I simply just dropped it ― pun intended. He probably still believes it until today.


On that same note, many years later a couple of friends and I were discussing Placebo Effect in general and this article in particular. One of them said, she wholeheartedly acknowledges the power of the mind and belief because she experienced it herself. So, apparently one day she had withdrawal symptoms after doing heroin for multiple weeks or months when her friend gave her a certain medication to ease her pain. She took it, felt better, then went to sleep. Only the next day they found out that she took a simple aspirin instead of the pain killer, by mistake, in the dark. And again here, the withdrawals went away as she was able to sleep; simply because her mind registered that she should feel better after taking the pill, so she did feel better. Wicked crazy huh?

This experience reminded me of my own addiction years. Because I had noticed that the heroin withdrawals almost disappeared whenever I would be going to meet the dealer; even speaking to them on the phone seemed to do something up or in there ― illuminating certain areas of the brain while enticing some neurons to fire. Maybe “almost disappeared” is a stretch, but certainly the pain and discomfort are alleviated. Knowing that you will be getting your fix soon, the mind gets one up there way before ingesting the drug.

Remarkably, one more person told me the same happens to him, only this one was hooked on cocaine. “Once that baggy is in my pocket, and I can hold it in my hand, I am already high or getting there,” he stated.

The Placebo Effect is a physical and psychological phenomenon, which naturally means that it affects everyone differently. While the anecdotal examples shared above are my own experiences and those of my friends, the research, studies, and findings in neuroscience, neuropharmacology, psychology are everywhere. No longer believing in the term “placebo” due to its association to certain derogatory connotations without actually being one in and of itself seems like a logical fallacy. Mainly because it is not a mere belief or opinion, but rather a fact with a whole lot of evidence to back it up. The mind-body neural connections and the relationship between both are indeed there.

All that said, the process has little to do with the type of drug. The mind along with the neurochemical connections it forms throughout the years remains notoriously powerful. Thank the Heavens for neuroplasticity and Epigenetics for showing us that nothing is caste in stone.

More about memory formation and how it affects our behaviour and decision making can be found in the last exposé,
The Intertwining of Pain and Pleasure

And more about the history and early days of acid can be found in my earlier dense exposé: The LSD Experiments of the 1950s and 60s [Videos & Documentaries]



Delving into the alluring topic of the Placebo Effect offers us clear insights into the workings of beliefs, thoughts, feelings, and intents. Placebo shows that our brain and perception have a profound effect on our body chemistry; consequently on our physical health as well as our experience of reality as a whole. It is so mysterious, it could be looked upon as an energetic phenomenon which works when the mind and heart (intent) match the energy of the result ― or the healing ― we wish to achieve. So the act of believing that we’ll heal, or trip, helps making us heal or trip in real; or at least speeds up the process in the case of the healing. This magic is poetry in motion.

Fascinatingly, more than two decades later science came to support our story. New research published in Psychopharmacology showed that placebo can indeed induce psychedelic effects, including perceptual alterations. In simpler words, subjects tripped following ingesting a sugar pill, which they were made to believe was a psychedelic drug resembling psilocybin found in magic mushrooms. 

To boost expectations, confederates subtly acted out the stated effects of the drug and participants were led to believe that there was no placebo control group.” So just like our little Zamalek skit in the late 90s, the ones in charge of the study played along to make it believable. Ha.

Another reported finding from the same study was that participants with no previous experience with psychedelics were more likely to feel the fake effects of the placebo, or some of them, compared to those with previous experience ― with 70 percent of the first group and 50 percent of the second. Still quite the significant numbers.


As seen, placebo shows that our minds have immense, perhaps unfathomable powers capable of manifesting the reality we wish. Aided by appropriate context and convenient expectations, it occurs when we align our frequency with the desire. Placebo is equally a reminder that if we want things to change, we should simply change the way we look at them.


Placebo Effect & The LSD Prank by Omar Cherif, One Lucky Soul

ALSO VIEW:

The Intertwining of Pain and Pleasure

Funny Drug-Related Stories

Funny Drug-Related Stories 2

The LSD Experiments of the 1950s and 60s [Videos & Documentaries]

Surviving the Madness of Sakarana — Hyoscyamus muticus

Opiated Then Hatin' It

Amphetamine, Methamphetamine, and Crystal Methamphetamine — A Psychonaut’s Review

Out-of-Body Experience and Ego Death on a “Heroic Dose” of Mushrooms

My Correspondence With a 31-Year-Old Reader Before He Passed Away

The Egyptian Man Who Kept a Piece of Hash in His Stomach for Four Years

Animals Getting High: Weird Nature ― Peculiar Potions [Documentary] 
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Monday 28 July 2014

Dzzzzz Alarmaaaaa — Waking and Alarms



Experts believe that before going to bed, 93% of people count how many hours of sleep they're going to get. Not exactly sure about the accuracy of that number but I did this myself for so many years, it was an obsession. I would keep delaying my alarm for seven extra minutes, then in the middle of the night I would add another three and stuff like that. It was berserk in a neurotic way.

Waking up to the disturbing sound of an alarm seems so unnatural. Studies have shown that when it comes to remembering our dreams, alarms make it way harder. The whole key to remembering dreams is to wake up slowly, to take a few minutes in doing so. With alarms this may seem like an impossibility because of that sudden rush and panic you get. Of course we all know what could 'I'll take a few extra minutes' lead to, especially when tired, which you usually are if that's how you wake up everyday...or five or six times a week.

However, people, especially with age, could find themselves waking up at around the same hour every day. When you keep waking at, say, 8 am for years the body clock adapts to the pattern and it becomes your own alarm; you get into a routine, a rhythm. My father is one example, he's been starting his day pretty much at the same time for the last few decades or so. And looking at those last four years of my life, I think I could also be following through, minus the occasional wild all-nighters that leave me looking like a Picasso the next morning.


Well, time is still an illusion, it's man-made. Sorry couldn't help it   :}

Venice Sunset

 
“Time is a created thing. To say 'I don't have time,' is like saying, 'I don't want to.” 
― Lao Tzu

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Sunday 27 July 2014

The MK-Ultra Piece Mystery





16 months ago I wrote this two-part research exposé and since then the daily views as well as the private messages and comments have not stopped. I've had this for a short while with the Great Pyramid piece then with the Mass Control one, but none has ever come close to this. And this is only the Conscious Life News stats. On Elite Agenda where it was also published and shared over 1000 times there is an even bigger number than the 23K shown here.

This was a really heavy topic. I remember by the end of the three weeks it took me to research and write I was in a morbid mood and needed to get it out of my head. The comments and private messages I had received and still receiving to this very day from victims and ex-victims of mind control; people who know weird things and curious people alike. Some of the atrocities they told me are beyond words and I know it did happen to them. Others, shown in some comments, are fictional and, possibly, deliberately misleading. 

One more bizarre thing is that by the time the piece has reached a few thousands readers suddenly one day all the few hundreds F.B 'likes' have vanished into thin air and went back to 0! I spoke to the publishers and they said this only happened to specific articles. I checked my other pieces and only those where I talk about the elite/Illuminati, mind control, the Rothschilds have had the same fate. I don't think it's a coincidence and Big Brother may be really watching as we already know, trying to stop this information from reaching people. We also know that the road of speaking truth is long, however, the views are still growing after all these months and the 'likes' started again from scratch, averaging 60 views per day this July ― making me wonder who is really reading. Whoever it is, that's a sign the words are reaching people.

This is the link for those who like to know what mind control is all about and the inhuman things that happened to many people between the 50s and 70s: (the link to Part 2 on Elite Agenda is at the end of Part 1)

MK-ULTRA: Then and Now – A Thorough Analysis of Mind Control – PART 1


Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Words With No Direct Translation To English



Words With No Direct Translation To English by Omar Cherif, One Lucky Soul

Language can be beautiful yet ambiguous and elusive, and sometimes even limiting. There are some feelings, ideas, and concepts that we cannot simply describe or put into words, some of which have no direct single-word translation within the English language. The following are some of said words that I compiled from all over. If you happen to speak any of those languages and know a better definition, please let me know in the comments.


1- Komorebi (木漏れ日): A Japanese word meaning sunlight that filters through the tree leaves; the sort of scattered, dappled light effect we get to witness.


2- Nefelibata
: (lit. “cloud walker”) A Portuguese word meaning he who lives in the clouds of his imagination and dreams and does not obey the conventional; not bound by the rules to which others adhere.


3- Gökotta: A Swedish word meaning to wake up early in the morning with the purpose of going outside to hear the first bird sing; dawn picnic intended to hear the first birdsong.


4- Shlimazl
: A Yiddish word for a chronically unlucky person; a recipient of unremitting unlucky events.


5- Iktsuarpok: An Inuit word for the frustration of waiting for someone to show up; to go outside to check if an expected visitor has arrived, over and over again.


6- Tsundoku ( 積ん読 )
: A Japanese word for the act of leaving books unread after buying them; piling them up with other unread books on shelves or floors or nightstands.


7- Backpfeifengesicht
: A German word for a face badly in need of a fist; a face that should be slapped.


8- Aware: A Japanese word for the bittersweetness of a brief and fading moment of transcendent beauty; its that “last burst of summer” feel, or the transience of early spring.


9- Hanyauku: A Rukwangali word (from Namibia) for the act of walking on tiptoes across warm sand.


10- Utepils
: A Norwegian word for sitting outside on a sunny day to enjoy a beer; the first drink of the year taken outdoors.


11- Prozvonit
: A Czech word for calling a mobile phone only to have it ring once so that the other person would call back, allowing to save money on minutes; deliberate missed call. 


12- Tingo
: A Pascuense word (Eastern Polynesian language spoken on the island of Rapa Nui, aka Easter Island) for the act of gradually stealing all the possessions out of a neighbours house by borrowing and not returning; to borrow items from someone, one by one, until they have nothing left.


13- Pochemuchka [počemúčka] (почемучка): A Russian word for a person, often a child, who asks a lot of questions, probably too many; a term of endearment for a person who is asking “why?” all the time; why-boy, why-girl, why-er. The word derives from “Pochemu” (“почему”) meaning “why” in Russian. It was inspired by a well-known Russian children’s book titled Что я ви́дел Što ja vídel, What I saw which tells the story of a highly inquisitive five- or six-year-old boy who was never satisfied with the answers he got.


14- Waldeinsamkeit: A German word for the feeling of being alone in the woods, of solitude and of connectedness to nature; of being at one with it all.


If you enjoyed this, you will probably also dig the sequel: More Words With No Direct Translation To English. 



Words With No Direct Translation To English by Omar Cherif, One Lucky Soul
Lunacy” — Supermoon captured over Los Angeles at 1:02 am on July 12, 2014 


   



ALSO VIEW:

More Words With No Direct Translation To English 

Words I Made Up

Words I Made Up — The Sequel

Unusual English Words I learned Later in Life
 
Why Many Place Names End with ‘-Stan’

Words With Italian Origin That Are Still Used Today In Egypt

From Hebrew ‘Tzedakah’ to Arabic ‘Sadaqah’: A Linguistic Tale of Origin of Charity and Righteous Giving in Judaism and Islam

The Origin of ‘Wishbone’ and the “Yadas - Fi bali” (يدس - في بالي) Game

The Real Origin of “It Will Cost You an Arm and a Leg” 

How ‘XOXO’ Came To Mean Hugs & Kisses

Why Hippies Are Sometimes Called Bohemians

From English as a Third Language to Author — How I Expanded My Vocabulary

Terms That Have Resonated With Me

What The Heck are Vocal Fry and Upspeak?

 



Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Thursday 24 July 2014

Between Shifting & Shattering Paradigms As I Cook Dinner — On Fast Food, Fluoride, and What ‘Work’ Really Is



Shot by Omar Cherif in Santa Monica, California
Reaching L.A in California after roaming around the U.S for a few months, I got to connect with my 83-year-old uncle Dr. Bitash, or simply Toutou. He is the husband of my mother's only sister and they have been living here since they left Egypt in the mid 60s. The man is a true savant with an extraordinary memory, and listening to his stories is like taking a magical trip through history, which always leaves me with a whole lot of new information as well as a few things to ponder on.

As sort of interviews, I already wrote this first Piece then followed by another One, though they are both in Arabic since it's about the history of Egypt.

This time, however, I'm not interviewing him but I'm trying to understand his mentality. After all, he was born in 1933 and that's 44 years before my time. In general, I love all elders and enjoy spending time with them. I enjoy listening to their stories, what they have gone through, and how life was different back then. And it's even more enjoyable if they are natural-born storytellers who only repeat themselves on occasions.
I actually hold that it's healthy to spend time with people over 80 and kids below 10 because you do learn a lot from them.

Obviously I knew Toutou all my life but I never really had the chance to spend much time or bond with him since he resided in the States. My close friends have always told me that there is a 50-year-old man inside of me, and I think an intergenerational friendship had started between him and this amazing human.

Earlier this week I came to stay with Dr. Toutou, and since my aunt is visiting Egypt and we are all alone in the house we got to speak about all sorts of things. We're in the quite area of the Valley so, nothing much to do and it's ridiculously hot outside. I hear that it could get 20 degrees hotter than where I was before by the beach in Venice and Santa Monica.

In most of the topics I'm merely a listener, simply because he knows much more than I do. In other 'newer' topics I find myself sometimes facing an old mentality which is the initial reason why I'm writing this. Not as a sort of complaint in any way, shape or form, but as an attempt to understand the human mind and the concept of ageing.

The conversation between us keeps flowing smoothly for hours at a time, it's not like I sit there craming my heads with all these thoughts and not enjoy the moment with him, and I'm only reflecting upon them now as I write.


We know that it's usually hard to change the mentality of old people, so I did not attempt it with Toutou. It just happened that among a wide array of topics we got to discuss, 'health' was one of them.

One the second day, he mentioned today's lunch and asked if I wanted KFC because they make this bucket and I don't know what. He seemed excited, so I nicely said that he can have some and I'll eat something else because I don't really eat junk or fried food. He then gently said forget about it and we ended with a healthier grilled chicken. Since then, and during the rest of my stay, I cook for us almost daily and all the food is fairly healthy.

The engaging conversation led us a few times to McDonald's and KFC, Fluoride in water, marijuana as well as what "working" means for the both of us.


From what I already know through personal research, today's McDonald's and KFC can merely be called food because of all the chemicals used in making them. In actual fact, only 15% is real beef in McDonald's, the rest are the fatty parts that are washed in ammonium hydroxide and used as fillers. Before this process, the meat is deemed unfit for human consumption. This toxicity may actually be OK with many, considering the 99 cent-prices and the fact that their outlets are insanely everywhere.

I had stopped eating any junk food many years ago and likely never will again. But to reach where I am now concerning these habits happened gradually, and it started with a trust issue towards big corporations. The thing is, when they become so huge their sole philosophy becomes money, it's all about profit not quality. So shit happens.

I remember my first shock was the guy from Utah who kept his Big Mac for 14 years and still looked intact.

The second was the horse meat scandal a couple of years ago in the U.K, Burger King, IKEA AND Taco Bell. How stable from the meat providers! (pun certainly intended)

This was alarming because it was hitting closer to home. Burger King was my preferred in the burger world and I had eaten there in England a few times; and, I once ate at IKEA, in Canada...but still.

Then last year it was the yoga mat material (Azodicarbonamide) in Subways' bread. Subways too!


The thing is that the above are not just stories in newspapers or hoaxes stirred up by envious competitors, but are real cases that are taken to court and the "corporations" have actually confessed about all such gibberish found in their food. So the question is, how can we trust them again?

By the time I quit altogether I had already been cooking everyday. This allowed me to eat healthy and to get creative with food, because one can always learn new recipes and make new dishes. And that's exactly what I'm doing here during my stay with Toutou, especially after learning that during the yearly three months when my aunt isn't around he eats either from Carl Jr. or McDonald's. This major life change was not only for health reasons, but also because cooking is a lot of fun.

Just yesterday I made oxtail soup with oxtail and white rice which he had never eaten before. It takes three and a half hours to make, but if you're into cooking you know it's all worth it to cook and feed someone you care about — and I learned this by how I get ecstatic to cook for old friends and show them my newly-acquired skills.

Bear in mind, however, that fast food's bad effects cannot really be sensed if eating it only occasionally. I remember before quitting completely I would feast once every few months on some KFC bucket or a Double Whopper. I would get naked (figuratively...or not) and oily and greasy and simply indulge. But taken on a regular basis and/or in great quantities, fast food's hazards can really be detrimental to our health. You know it has always been considered to be the unhealthiest option ever for a reason.

I think quitting for me also had a moral aspect to it. I couldn't be against their health choices or how they treat their underpaid employees then go eat there. So boycotting felt like the right thing to do.


For the topic of fluoride (sodium fluoride), there is absolutely no medical reason for its existence in drinking water or anywhere. It is historically known that fluoride was used in Nazi Concentration camps and the gulags in Siberia to keep their prisoners docile and easy to control. Comprehensive studies have shown that it is a powerful central nervous system (CNS) toxin and can adversely affect human brain functioning even at low doses; it causes bone fractures, lowered IQ, thyroid dysfunction, cancer, allergies among other things.


In fact, fluoride isn't one substance, that's just a cover-up umbrella term; it contains some toxic chemicals like
lead, arsenic, aluminum, cadmium and fluorosilicic acid.

That's not me, Google it and see what science thinks, especially if you live in the U.S and drink from the tap. This Article is a start if you want to remove or reduce your and your loved ones intake of this poison. There is also the below short doc which explains it plainly. 

 
The hazardous thing with fluoride is that
it's not just about drinking water, but it is also absorbed through the skin when bathing, showering, or swimming in fluoridated water; it is absorbed through the tissues of your mouth when brushing your teeth; it is used
in insecticide so it is on our fresh produce.

Above all this, fluoride also calcifies the pineal gland by accumulating there. That's a different story we might discuss some other time.
Ever notice how fluoridated toothpastes have warning labels on them and fluoride-free toothpastes do not? Sodium fluoride is even more toxic than certain forms of rat poison.


 

The thought-provoking is that during the ultra-secret Manhattan Project, a report was commissioned to assess the effect of fluoride on humans. That report was classified 'secret' for reasons of "(alleged) national security". I mean, really, if they carried on experiments with LSD and other psychotropic drugs on unwary citizens and committed some mind-control freakywicked stuff for years with MK-Ultra, why would that be so strange to accept? Besides, it's banned in Europe and most of Canada, why is it still used in the U.S?


Another time we started talking about the ambiguous word 'work'. The older generation don't really relate to what working independently means. They were all workers of some sort, and I was too, for 10 years. Then I realized that it's not for me, though I had always sensed I had a different calling.

So "work," I know it doesn't have to be "for" someone and you can be independent like the case of artists and
investors and adventurers and explorers...and mystics. It's more of a journey here, Doc, a vocation. And money or applause aren't the destination.

Work does not have to be from 9 to 5 or in shifts. It also sure does not, or should not, have to be something you don't like but just do to keep up with the system. Apart from being slavery, that is suicide.

He happened to tell me something like that when discussing the case I plan to get married, and I have heard it many times before and wholeheartedly don't agree with.
You have to do it because that's how it's done.” Because that's all we know is what they really want to say.

I have actually done that for years
and I was working for the best multinational corporations, so when I say no it comes from knowing. Thanx but no thanx. Besides, I see people having great jobs doing things they don't care about, and guess what? None of them is truly or essentially happy. It brings money, yes, social status, it could. But to excel and shine one has to follow the path of his heart. If we're doing it because we feel that we must, just like a homework, then we can't really go far.

If you think about it you'll find that whatever we call work nowadays usually has negative connotation. It entails doing something you don't want to do, something unnatural
― think homework. And that is a problem. Mark Twain said that work and play are words used to describe the same thing under differing conditions. And no one could have said it better. It's all in how you look at it.

I see the word 'work' itself to mean doing something. If you can be fully immersed into it, then great. Work also means to create. The value of what you create may only be significant to you, but it really doesn't matter. In art for example, there is a certain thrill in reliving our own conceptions; for leaving something that wasn't there before; for being co-creators of the Universe.

When you consistently keep doing that something, out of repetitions, you become good at it. So you keep doing it more and get even better. And if you're doing it with love and passion, then that's a big plus and you'll likely go places in Life. That's how I see it.

I also think that if you're good enough money and abundance will come to you; no need to sell yourself or exchange your reality for a role and for some papers. These views are specifically why some think of me as too much of a dreamer or even have a Utopian way of looking at things. Maybe I do maybe I don't, as long as I'm happy.

The thing is, I'm sure he knows what I'm talking about as he is a practicing doctor living in 2014 Los Angeles. It's just that it's a different paradigm in which he floats, and days-long discussions like these can show a lot. He's also a doctor with a highly developed left brain who thinks philosophy is nonsense and art is just art. 


Same thing more or less for the subject of Marijuana. I only remember telling him and my aunt once how it is legal now and that green pharmacies (dispensaries) are all over California. Their only humorous response was to stay away from them. I chose not to go further here as well because by now I think I know what kind of information could reach him and what couldn't. Logically, marijuana seems to be one of those subjects that will not go through.


Even with being an open minded ex-surgeon who's still practicing medicine for exactly 60 years, Dr. Toutou couldn't really wrap his mind around some new paradigms. Not out of narrow-mindedness or anything like that, but it's because there is a certain mental gap. I didn't, however, feel like pushing too much as we spoke about such topics. But for him to actually believe me, he has to come to terms that what he's been doing for many years of his life is unhealthy, either eating the junk food or drinking fluoridated tap water and unwarily ingesting it through other means.

I think the worst in my opinion is knowing that the authorities are deliberately intoxicating the people and allowing corporations to rule the scene. That is really one paradigm-shattering realization, for no one likes to get fooled, let alone a well-read doctor at his age.

It will also beg some deeper question, like why. Is it for depopulation purposes or is it for crippling the masses mentally and physically and spiritually by keeping them passive and apathetic and under control? Scary thought to see how the value of the life of man could be such a dearth commodity nowadays. 

Of course when I told him why I choose to not eat and drink such items, he semi-sarcastically asked me if I believe these things. I said I do but, again, didn't venture further as my intention was not to change his mind. At some point he even said the fluoride is good for you. I found later that he must have meant the good fluoride, the natural existing calcium fluoride.


In a way I feel like sitting him down and showing him the scientific evidence. Because of how the media is today, someone like him would never know about any of these things if it's not in the mainstream scene. He loves to read but he also loves to watch T.V, and that's what he has been doing for decades now, everyday. Mainly all is through Egyptian cable, and that means the mind-numbing soap operas and all the news I had happily divorced five years ago. That's another factor when considering the difference in paradigms. But then everyone at his age watches T.V. Heck, most people I know watch T.V, and I know a lot of people.

Oh, well.

In another way, why would I want to do that? All this has reminded me that we people tend to prefer the familiarity rather then getting lost in the novelty. Toutou actually seems progressive compared to others as he knows how to use the laptop; he's also relatively healthy for his age. However, my aunt for example, who is 10 years younger, does not come near the computer because she's afraid from it; it makes her comfortable as she once confessed. 

Likewise, their daughter and her husband were not really convinced when I tried to explain that changing to Firefox or Chrome from Explorer would be way better. They seemed reluctant to take the risk. And that's an even younger generation.

Another example was my former teacher and editor who's in her 50s and doesn't own a mobile phone —
 probably for more or less the same reason.

I remember that I, too, was fighting the iPod when it came out in the late 90s because I loved my CD collection and their artworks and their lyrics. Eventually I got one in 2002 as I gift from my aunt and loved it; it's the same one I still have today. Then I fought Facebook and made fun of my sister and her friends for using it. Then it was the Blackberry, but got one as a gift from my mother as she was getting the newer. And for the last four years, I've also been fighting the iPhone and still going strong...until now.

All that clinging to the past is because I was satisfied with my current situation, even though the novelty and the technology naturally can make our life easier. So I can relate, and perhaps also I'm a little afraid that I won't be able to keep up and become out of touch from reality when older. Not that I'm SO in touch with it now... but you know what I mean.  

See, people are generally afraid from what they don't know. They don't like not knowing because they are conditioned to fear the unknown, some may fight it. But the reality is, we are not born like that, we are taught to fear; it's acquired. 

Fearing the unknown could be problematic.

One, because naturally there will always be things you don't know. And since change is the only constant in life, it will make you uncomfortable and you'll probably live in a small and contained loop, surrounded by the comfort zone all the things you do know represent, which is the case for many people. 

Two, it distances you from the world. This one doesn't sound that bad, but I mean distance you from the real existence — from the Truth. You're stuck in that loop and it's full of other people's ways of thinking and words...and, you know, whole culture. And if all your mental intake has been coming through T.V and newspapers year after year, and you believe what you see, hear, and read, then I dare saying that you must be brainwashed to some degree. We were all there at some point. 

Three is highly important. And it's you never get to do or learn new things. That is a killer, because, in general, with no change, life becomes boring and repetitive. You don't grow through it, you're merely existing and getting older. For the day we stop learning new things is the day we start ageing.


At the end, I believe it's probably wise to let the elders live in their own world without disturbing them. Nothing good can come out from shattering the paradigm he knows. As for myself, I choose to keep pushing the envelope of this generation; I choose to shift paradigms, because it's good for me and it keeps me happy and healthy. And I do that by learning from men like Dr. Toutou, from their victories, their regrets, and their stories.



“Man is nothing else but what he makes of himself.”
― Jean-Paul Sartre



Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Sunday 20 July 2014

Some Useful How-To Videos



Ever wondered if there is a right way to eat a banana and there is a not-so-right way? Well, me neither. Only a few days ago when I got to watch a YouTube video called 'How To Peel A Banana Like A Monkey' did I ever even think about it. I'm sure excluding bananas from my diet for the last 20 years has a lot to do with ignoring this.

So, I watched that video and later in the day when it was time for my daily banana I remembered the new information and did it. Once I started the peeling from the top down by pinching the black top off, it reminded me of all the cartoons I used to watch in my childhood. Because this is exactly how the peeled banana looked like there. And because I was always doing it the other way, from the stem down like most people, I never saw it like that. It actually feels so right, leaving me wondering how many people still don't know this.
Now you know so it's time to go banana :}



If you enjoy learning new things then you'll probably enjoy the following simple tips. Personally, I'm always seeking the best, fastest, and most efficient way to do anything. When I watched those videos and tried the the hacks myself — except the potato one for lack of space — I found that they all work, so I thought I'd share the novelty. Enjoy...


1
 

2

3

4


5


6

7

8


9

10

This last one made me feel like an idiot. To feel better I rushed to the kitchen, found the magic button in both, the aluminum and the plastic, and tucked them in. To my relief, now I feel like a bad ass. 




 

ALSO VIEW:

Hacks You May have Missed


Random Stuff You May Not Know — Three 
Nations' Did You Know






Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Friday 18 July 2014

Find Your Tao — Phoolosophising en Prosoetry



Shutterstock - Find Your Tao — Phoolosophising en Prosoetry by Omar Cherif, One Lucky Soul

I could be that guy you love and hate at the same time, they say

Not in any evil way, but in more of a !@#$%^&*_+() kinda way

This is totally fine by the way, I heard myself say, yesterday


In one way, I embody the paradoxical essence of the opposing forces of the YOUniverse
into which they interplay

And in another way... {drum roll as cute tiny monkeys anticipate a sheer, genuine
Michael Jackson with his popcorn moment


If I may if I may, allow me to portray
Either way, we're all on one highway
A three-pound mass of thinking water floating in the cosmos at insane speeds of light that fight
the freight fright during the whole day… and night
Flirting with the inevitable doomsday... near our sight
Left Right? 
Grey Gray? Hehey, pal, who cares about trivialities anyway


I don’t want to be right

I don’t care to be bright
See it my way if you might
For all I want is to live LOVE and write 

It’s that simple alright
So respect my fight for my flight is plight

And in a
ny way, you still want to play

Then I ought to cheerfully replay:


The gateway is the guideway…
...And the hideaway is the runaway…
...
And the roadway is the causeway...
How come we drive in the parkway but park in the driveway?


Lallalla Lallaalli Happey-Happey
Cache-Cache Play-Play

There is your way, his way,
this way and that way
I too the Tao takes me a
way

But the one and only way there is will always be your own way

No matter what they say
Workday, prayday or playday

Don’t do it for half a life of prepay

Do it instead for Today
 

The Here and Now is all we got, dear Mr. and Mrs. Conventional Way
So save yourself the alackaday and your heyday
dismay
And think WIZmey: Aren’t we all on the same walkway
Guiding each other home till we forever fade away as stardust and sunray?

This is no heresy or hearsay
In some way, this may be the one true way
The Within Throughway

Remember, ’tis not Hip Hip Hoorey or Hip Hip Hooray   
But Hip Hip Hoorey and Hip Hip Hooray  
 
Okay. Now to
celebrate the ashtrays birthday
before I come lay
Or should I keep going with my humble naysay display, mon bey?

How CrayCray is this ingenious wordplay 


Carpe Noctem and Seize Thy Day  ;}

 

*Bows down lexophilingly and retreats in silence, disappearing into the mysterious foggy night. He will not be mist.




*Dedicated to some people I once knew




“There are nowadays professors of philosophy, but not philosophers. Yet it is admirable to profess because it was once admirable to live. To be a philosopher is not merely to have subtle thoughts, nor even to found a school, but so to love wisdom as to live according to its dictates, a life of simplicity, independence, magnanimity, and trust.”

— Henry David Thoreau, Walden



ALSO VIEW:
 
When The Sky Spoke Back

Thinking Allowed Is Aloud

The Womb

The Mystic and the Tripper


Trump Le Trompeur


Living On Insanity’s Brink

Tamarack Over Jack

قصيدة تسلم الأيادي ... لو كانت نضيفة

Sophia And The Djembefola

The Alpha-Beta Poem
 
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Thursday 17 July 2014

Terms That Have Resonated With Me



Terms That Have Resonated With Me by Omar Cherif, One Lucky Soul


This is a selection of terms and their definitions which were worth finding out those last few years. I was happy to know these words actually exist. And if you have existentialist tendencies or if big words turn you on, then you will probably dig some of them.

  • Sapiosexual: A behaviour of becoming attracted to or aroused by intelligence and its use.
  •  
  • Pantheism: A doctrine that identifies God with the universe, or regards the universe as a manifestation of God; the belief that the Universe — or Nature as the totality of everything — is identical with divinity.

    Not to be confused with Panentheism where God lies within and also beyond or outside of the universe.

  • Synesthesia (also spelled synæsthesia or synaesthesia): A neurological phenomenon or condition in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway leads to automatic, involuntary experiences in a second sensory or cognitive pathway. In other words, it is when the senses overlap or trigger each other in an atypical way. Meaning, one can taste words, see sounds, and hear colours among other mix-ups of the senses. ⠀⠀⠀
    ⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
    One form of synesthesia joins objects such as letters, shapes, numbers or people’s names with a sensory perception such as smell, colour, or flavour. While experiences remain unique depending on each synesthete, some common pairings were found between the letter ‘B’ and the colour blue, the number ‘0’ and white, and ‘1’ and black. Those were among natural synesthetes.
    ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
    While Synesthesia occurs naturally to about 4% of the population, with other sources citing only 1%. Another minority can get a glimpse of what it is while on psychedelics — LSD in particular. However, in a study published in
    Neuropsychologia, researchers at the University of London (UoL) revealed that the one caused by LSD, the “inducer”, is not genuine synesthesia. For it to be considered so, the response must be confirmed by consistency and specificity, meaning that the same inducer must produce the same reaction every time.

    But under the influence of LSD the subjects did not report specific colour experiences with graphemes and sounds. Sounds and colours were no more consistent than with placebos. The results showed that whatever is experienced under acid was not “true” synesthesia. It is still quite the wickedly enjoyable experience.


    The below When Senses Collide: Synesthesia is a 2008 eye-opening documentary about this truly bewitching phenomenon.


  • Biocentrism: The view or belief that the rights and needs of humans are not more important than those of other living things — a sort of new Theory of Everything. It states that life and biology are central to being, reality, and the cosmos — life creates the universe rather than the other way around. In a political and ecological sense, it is an ethical point of view that extends inherent value to all living things. Biocentrism stands in contrast to Anthropocentrism, which centers on the value of humans. The related term Zoocentrism limits inherent value specifically to animals.

  • Dudeism: Dudeism is a philosophy and lifestyle inspired by the modern-day fictional character Jeffrey “The Dude” Lebowski, as portrayed by Jeff Bridges in the Coen Brothers 1998 film The Big Lebowski. Dudeism's stated primary objective is to promote a modern form of Chinese Taoism, outlined in Tao Te Ching by Lao Tzu — Laozi — (6th century BC), blended with concepts by the Ancient Greek philosopher Epicurus (341-270 BC), and presented in a style as personified by the character of “The Dude”.

    Dudeism has sometimes been regarded as a mock religion; though its founder and many adherents regard it seriously.

    Here is a little fun story from a few years back in Venice Beach to break the list:

    The Kid Who Called Me “The Dude”⠀⠀⠀⠀
    ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
    While picking up dinner from a local Thai place I got off the bike and went in to pay. Being the weekend, it was busy and they told me it will take another ten minutes, so I waited outside. ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
    There were three wide-eyed, energetic black kids — two boys who look like they could be fraternal twins and a girl about a couple of years older. Their mother, who’s in her mid-30s with green eyes which beautifully match her skin, was waiting for their order inside. ⠀
    ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
    Seeing their playful mood, I began making faces to the adorable kids. And they naturally responded with more faces. I then twisted my tongue, making a u-shape. They tried to mimic it but couldn’t, so I told them that there is a myth about how tongue-rolling is genetic; how to able to do it their father as well as mother must both be able to. But that is just a common myth. ⠀

    The mother was coming out of the place when she heard that very last part and smiled. It was then when one of the boys looked at me from head to toes, nodded his head, and with a certain conviction he said: “I’m gonna call you Lebowski. You and your bike and your hair and your beard and your flip-flops. You’re Lebowski.”

    Uhm. It took me about two seconds to register that the kid did really say that — right pronunciation and all. He could not be more than five years old, so it was quite a surprise. Looking at his mom, I asked: “By Lebowski… does he mean “The Dude”?

    Smiling again, she replied: “I guess, yeah.

    Waow. How perceptive. Actually my friends do call me ‘The Dude’” (*wondering in my mind if it became so apparent).
    ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
    O’ the things kids just genuinely blurt out. ⠀⠀⠀


  • Eclecticism: a. Deriving ideas, style, or taste from a broad and diverse range of sources.

    b. PHILOSOPHY: Of, denoting, or belonging to a class of ancient philosophers who did not belong to or found any recognised school of thought but selected such doctrines as they wished from various schools.

  • Apophenia: The experience of seeing meaningful patterns or connections in random or meaningless data. Described as “unmotivated seeing of connections” accompanied by a “specific experience of an abnormal meaningfulness”; has come to represent the human tendency to seek patterns in random information in general, such as with gambling and paranormal phenomena.


    Terms That Have Resonated With Me by Omar Cherif, One Lucky Soul
  • Biophilia: A hypothesis suggesting that there is an instinctive bond between human beings and other living systems; an urge to affiliate with other forms of life; a tendency to interact or be closely associated with other forms of life in nature. 

  • Syncretism: The combining of different beliefs while melding practices of various schools of thought; the amalgamation or attempted amalgamation of different religions, cultures, or schools of thought. It involves the merger and analogizing of several originally discrete traditions, especially in the theology and mythology of religion, thus asserting and underlying a sense of unity and oneness while allowing for an inclusive approach to other faiths. 

 And finally and perhaps more importantly,

  • Frisbeetarianism: The belief that, after death, the soul flies up onto the roof and stays there.


So if you’re high and/or horny now, you’re most welcome. If not, then this may add a thing or two for you to think about.


Terms That Have Resonated With Me by Omar Cherif, One Lucky Soul
“Luminaries of Pantheism” is a new eye-catching mural on the
Ocean Front Walk in Venice Beach.

The painting features Albert Einstein, Alan Watts, Baruch Spinoza,
Terence McKenna, Carl Jung, Carl Sagan, Emily Dickinson,
Nikola Tesla, Friedrich Nietzsche, Ralph Waldo Emerson,
W.E.B. Du Bois, Henry David Thoreau, Elizabeth Cady Stanton,
Rumi, Adi Shankara, and Lao Tzu.

Art by Levi Ponce. Design by Peter Moriarty. Conception by Perry Rod.


ALSO VIEW:


Words With No Direct Translation To English
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Saturday 12 July 2014

Why Do Cats Give Massages?




Cats Kneading
 
We have all watched those cute videos of cats massaging their humans, dogs, other cats and kittens, and even chairs, couches, and cushions. Some of us get to witness it live. But have you ever wondered what that peculiar behaviour is about?




Alright, so this massaging motion using the front paws is called kneading. It is a natural and instinctive trait in felines. Not all cats knead, but it’s a common behaviour which starts at a young age and stays through adulthood. The motion is dubbed “making biscuits” because it resembles kneading dough.

Some cats knead by retracting their claws as they rhythmically alternate between the paws, while others extend them. Cats may sometimes appear to be in a kind of trance mid doing it; many purr with eyes closed, some even drool.


 I have experienced the drooling part after bonding with my sister's cat, though this was when I was the one massaging her while she was lying on my chest and peacefully purring. 

The reason why it is believed that such massaging motion is instinctive is that newborn kittens know how to knead mama’s belly with their tiny front paws as they nurse. They do so to stimulate a flow of milk through her nipples. It starts shortly after birth and they keep doing it even when older. That, it seems, is because it remains associated with the rewarding comfort of nursing as an emotional security. Although cats separated from their mothers will still knead as adults.








Despite the availability of few theories, no one is exactly sure why cats make biscuits.

Some say it may be an indication that the female is willing and ready to mate, and that she’ll be going into heat (Estrus) soon. Others say it’s a sign of stress or anxiety and they do it to calm themselves. 


It is also believed that some cats knead to get attention or to show contentment.

Another theory highlights the fact that all cats are territorial beings. Hence the behaviour remains from the times when cats were wild. They had used similar motions then to pat down grass and leaves in order to make beds for sleeping or for giving birth. It is known that cats have scent glands in the soft pads on the bottom of their paws; so kneading works like some kind of scent-marking to a territory or belonging.

It could also be because it’s comforting for them to do it on soft and flexible surfaces. Or, simply, they may just be massaging out of love. 



Meaow that you know the possible reasons for such behaviour, if there is kneading and the kitty-cats look happy, then let them be. You can even enjoy it with them in case they’re doing it to you or just by watching. But if they are overdoing it, then you should probably try to find out why.

Stay curious. Also learn how cats are genetically wilder than dogs on this recent article: Why Cats Are Not Dogs

Coutcha Coutcha saying hello



ALSO VIEW:

Why Cats Are Not Dogs

Big Cat Hybrids

What Nomad Lions Can Teach Us About Growing Through Life

Things I Wish All Dog Owners Would Understand

From Insects to Crows: Dogless and Searching for Companionship

Training a Gentle Giant — Shay The Saint Bernard

A Dieu Caramella

When Lady Ran Away

When The Puppies Ate The “Chocolate”

The Most Loyal Dogs in History

Izzy The Egyptian American Doggo [Video]

Why Flamingos Are Pinkish-Orange

Extinction

The Most Unusual and Unknown Creatures

The Most Unusual and Unknown Creatures II

Some Animals I Shot

Animals That Are Not To Be Confused
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...