Wednesday, October 15, 2025

short stories, part whatever and more Oct. skies


Steve of Shadows and Light wrote that the parakeets that come to his bird feeder are molting, losing old feathers and growing new ones, as all birds do. It made me think of trees which also ‘molt’, losing old leaves and growing new ones. And then of humans who do not molt though hair and skin cells are constantly shed and replaced. Which got me to thinking about hair and how long an individual hair lives since some women who have never cut their hair from birth have extremely long hair. So I looked it up. A human hair lives and grows on average 2 - 7 years before the resting phase and finally shedding and can reach a maximum length of 3’ - 6’ or about half as long as the person is tall depending on the individual, genetics, breakage, and relative health of the hair. There are exceptions of course as there are in all things, some women have/had hair down to their ankles which must be a nightmare to wash.

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Last Friday was Paisleigh’s 4th birthday and her party was Saturday afternoon. The child has a playground in her backyard. For her 2nd birthday she got a full size trampoline, 3rd birthday a bouncy castle and a play set that consists of a strap anchored between trees with a swing, hoops, ladder, and some other stuff I can’t recall descending from it. This birthday she got a treehouse with two slides (fast and slow), a climbing wall (about 5’ at a slant), and a zip line. At 4 Paisleigh already knows the proper response to any present she opens whether she fully understands what it is or not. She gasps with delight. Unless it’s the third gift of clothes clothes, oh, another shirt though she did like the new jacket that is so heavy it might get cold enough this winter for her wear it a day or two.

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If you’ve been reading me for a while you may remember the dust up with the then new neighbor, the gun nut with his chickens who would shoot at stray and neighbors' dogs who came into his yard chasing his chickens, chickens he made no effort to contain and let go into neighboring yards. One day he shot at the neighbor's dog in its own yard because it had been in his yard and the bullet whizzed by that neighbor. Big confrontation and the chicken man finally put a fence around the property. Well he died of a heart attack about five years ago, the chickens all finally died or were killed by other critters. Last year the widow got more chickens and although the property is still fenced there is a low spot where three or four of them get out under the fence every day and they strut around in the ditch and in other neighbor’s yards and she makes no effort to prevent it. I’ve chased them out of my yard. Second part of this, another neighbor who generally has a big dog or two who are well behaved and stay in their yard, had surgery on his neck that didn’t go as well as hoped and is undergoing PT in Sugar Land during the week so no one is home and the scraggly male big dog and two puppies there currently are roamers. Yesterday they knocked over my neighbor on the east side’s trash can and spread trash around and this morning when that neighbor was mowing his yard the dog trotted down the street with something big and brown in it’s mouth followed by the two puppies. I hollered at my neighbor, what did he have in his mouth? A chicken. Life in the country.

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Another interesting article from Nautilus…an interview with author Kieran Fox, a neuroscientist, of a book about Albert Einstein, I Am A Part Of Infinity, The Spiritual Journey Of Albert Einstein, and worth the read. A few quotes from the interview/book:  


“Reading Kant, I began to suspect everything I was taught,” Einstein said. “I no longer believed in the known God of the Bible, but rather in the mysterious God expressed in nature.”


“Not long after, in his early 20s, while Einstein was putting together the ideas that would revolutionize the physics of space, time, and matter…he kept exploring this other conception of the divine. He read the philosophical reflections of Arthur Schopenhauer, who saw that the radical religious ideas of thinkers…that nature and God are somehow One—mirrored similar notions in the oldest sacred Indian scriptures.” 


“At age 51…he explained his own contact with the divine. “I will call it the cosmic religious sense.”” and nine years later “Life and death flow into one, and there is neither evolution or destiny; only being.” 


“How can this cosmic religious experience be communicated man to man, if it cannot lead to a definite conception of God or to a theology? It seems to me that the most important function of art and of science is to arouse and keep alive this feeling in those who are receptive.” 

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More October skies, 7th - 12th.





29 comments:

  1. Codex: will be back on this one
    Thought you might enjoy this
    https://www.businessinsider.com/god-does-not-play-dice-quote-meaning-2015-11

    Interested in a little history of physics?

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  2. There is only being. Simple and profound. I would NOT like your neighbors, but we’ve had some bad ones in our lives, too.

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    1. They aren't obtrusively bad. The one with chickens never comes out of her house, only to leave, never see her in the yard, anti-social. The other with the dogs, this is a new experience because he is undergoing PT in another town for a surgery on his neck that didn't go as planned. He is or has been a good neighbor. It's just that nobody is consistently there to deal with things. And the lots here are half acre so it's not elbow to asshole.

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  3. When I had chickens the neighbor two doors down had two dogs who would break out of their fenced yard and come over here and massacre my hens which they did not even pretend to want to eat. It was all about the killing. Dogs will do this unless they are specifically trained not to. My chickens rarely left our yard. It was if they knew the boundaries. Occasionally a few would, but not often.
    I guess Einstein's Theory of God is as good as any but it may also be as wrong as any. Unlike the Theory of Relativity, there is no scientific way to prove it. But I have a feeling it's all about energy whatever that means.

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    1. I'm not sure that neighbor is even aware that her chickens get out or even that the dog got one. She is always in her house, very anti-social, only rarely do I see her out in her yard, maybe just a couple of times a year.

      From what I've read and understand about quantum physics, it's very nearly proof of the underlying connectedness/consciousness (god for lack of a better word) of everything that exists from the most complex right down to the smallest particle. The problem with the word god in our culture is that it is most identified with the concept of an all powerful being that exists outside of the universe/creation so it's really not a proper noun for the concept that creation/the universe and all that it is is the expression of a universal force.

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  4. Not sure old Albert should dip his pen into things unproveable. Also , having just read recently, the story of his first wife , who helped and often times came up with the scientific wisdom that defined her husband, his treatment of her, his affair with first cousin, whom he married- I am less inclined to honor anything about him except that one leap forward. His horrid behaviour -"woman- take a back seat and shut up" puts him in a different category than super hero.

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    1. Many things were unprovable until they were. No person is perfect. There are no unicorns.

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  5. Codex: Einstein lived at a time when there were no women in science. He advocated for Curie to be accepted into the academy because he recognized her brilliance. No man did that.

    He also had to flee and remained conflicted about religion as a result. Quantum theory was discovered in the 20s, he disagreed with it, because he did not see the universe as random but he was talking about physics not anything else. He was not very spiritual so this is a new and interesting take (will read this weekend thanks Ellen)
    For that time period he was light years ahead in terms of feminism that did not even exist as it does now.
    Not sure where Linda's quote came from but it's wrong.

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    1. Apparently the idea that he mused on spirituality was not known not because he didn't but because that aspect of his intelligence was not reported.

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  6. Codex: There's a lot of historical misinformation right now. Einstein advocated for women and their scientific accomplishments his whole life. It's in his letters and journals. At a time when male scientists refused to even let women present their papers.

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    1. or patent their ideas and inventions, or publish their music compositions, or exhibit their art, or be allowed to study and research, or anything really except be a wife and mother.

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  7. Sexual selection drove human hair. Also the gross female chimp butt => Bipedalism => fine shapely ass

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    1. Not so sure about that. Male humans will mate with any female that will let them or that then can physically subdue regardless of the length of hair.

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    2. True. It's an aesthetic choice, like blue eyes

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  8. When we toured the local selection of playgrounds with the grandchild, then aged 4, the reply was: can we go to the forest?
    Apart from the zip line, the rest was considered boring and "just for once".
    We have not seen blue sky for ages, central Europe is under a cloud dome. So nice to see yours.

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    1. Paisleigh lives on 5 acres of a heavily wooded lot. Only the forepart of the lot where the houses are is cleared of underbrush and mowed. The bouncy house is only inflated for parties.

      I wouldn't mind a cloud dome for awhile if it would bring us some badly needed rain.

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  9. In the hair department I got short-changed from the beginning! Seems like your neighbours are quite awful. Firing a gun in a residential neighbourhood here would land you in the courts very quickly.

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    1. Well, we are a small neighborhood outside of town in a sparsely populated agricultural county in Texas. When the guy called the county about dogs chasing his chickens he says they told him he could shoot them. I imagine they were thinking feral dogs. The neighbor took that to mean he could pop off his gun whenever he wanted saying he was in the country and could. Another neighbor had to tell him that no, 'country' meant your nearest neighbor was a mile or more away, not next door. Once he got his fence it was resolved.

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  10. We don't really have dogs roam our neighborhood anymore. We used to, but either the dogs died (of old age) or the folks moved. In any case, unless the multitudinous cats decide to try their luck, the neighbor's chickens & ducks are safe. Which is good because I am HIGHLY amused seeing them wander around.

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    1. Minnie is totally uninterested in chasing chickens. The neighborhoods cats now, that's another story.

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  11. I was in Manvel, TX last weekend and we went to Sugar Land for my grandson's hockey game. It was a busy weekend - 1 soccer game, visit to NASA space center, hockey game, and 2 piano recitals!
    I wouldn't like long hair like that. I buzz my own when it starts brushing my neck. :)

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    1. I had long hair for decades but when I got to the point of either having a ponytail, braid, or bun to keep it out of my face (which I cannot tolerate) and off my neck...chop chop.

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  12. Your first three cloud photos are especially appealing to me. Now, if only we could get some leaden gray skies heralding rain! That long hair made me think of Rapunzel for the first time. I remember the verse, but I can't quite remember the story line. I need to look it up for a refresher. Speaking of chickens, one of the locals here has a different take on those skeletons that have started showing up at Halloween time. Their yard is filled with (fiberglass?) skeletons of chickens, large and small. I must say I laughed aloud when I saw them. They ought to add a canine skeleton to the mix.

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    1. Rapunzel, Rapunzel, let down your golden hair. I saw black plastic chickens painted with skeletons at the Tractor Supply.

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  13. You had some VERY clear skies a couple of days there! If that woman can't be bothered to contain her chickens on her property she has to expect some of them will go missing. Then again, if the dogs intruded on her property, that's another thing.

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    1. Nothing but blue sky days and when we do get some cloud cover...no rain.

      Nope, property fenced. And she may not even realize the dog got one as she is anti-social and is never outside. If she's home, she's inside.

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I opened my big mouth, now it's your turn.