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What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby Heineken » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 11:56:53

P.S. to Narz:

If you have a good eye for detail, and are good at remembering and applying a zillion rules, you might try getting a job as a proofreader. That's usually the ground floor for getting into the editing biz. Or if you're lucky you might land an entry-level copy-editing job.

Publishing (and editing) has become so computerized I hardly recognize it. I was lucky to be able to work from 1989 to 1996 for a pharmacy journal that used pencil editing throughout that period. Although parts of my job became computerized, the essential act of editing remained unchanged, which was a good thing from my point of view.

My computer skills are clunky, and I don't like staring at a screen all day, and I think better with a pencil in my hand, so things worked out miraculously well for me, but it was sheer luck because of the particular journal I got hooked up with. Nowadays there'd be little room for a walking anachronism like me.

But if you're really good with computers, so much the better.
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby Bas » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 12:04:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'P').S. The high quality and general braininess of the members of this site make me especially fearful for the future, since most of us are doomerish.


That makes me fearful as well, eventhough I don't belong to "most"
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby eastbay » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 14:49:35

Well, although we may not quite be the smartest, at least most here understand the basics of peak oil. There are many really, really, smart and clever people out there including downright geniuses who have no clue as to what's coming.
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby strider3700 » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 14:51:51

You have to remember that the more intelligent among us throughout history have regularly leaned towards the doomer/depressed/crazy side.

These days I'm of the opinion that being more intelligent doesn't help you in society. If anything the additional abuse you are likely to recieve in school stands a good chance of affecting your view of the world through the rest of society. I often wonder if my doomerish views stem from an honest view of the state of the world or a deep-seated desire to watch the world burn and finally see a lifetime of consequences catch up to decades of poor choices.
shame on us, doomed from the start
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby uNkNowN ElEmEnt » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 15:01:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ell, although we may not quite be the smartest


I totally disagree with this. I was tested because the social workers could not believe I could endure what I have in life and not have a substance abuse problem... so they thought they would test me (they had the right since I was a ward of the courts)

my IQ was 138, that was also when they found out I had dyslexia, which apparently diminished the score on your tests. "They" also say that people only get along with others who are within about 10 points in either direction on the IQ scale...

and i get along with quite a few people here (which would mean their IQ's have to range between 128 and 148, which is definitely above average) and I know there are smarter people on here than I am...
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby Heineken » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 15:10:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('strider3700', 'Y')ou have to remember that the more intelligent among us throughout history have regularly leaned towards the doomer/depressed/crazy side.

These days I'm of the opinion that being more intelligent doesn't help you in society. If anything the additional abuse you are likely to receive in school stands a good chance of affecting your view of the world through the rest of society. I often wonder if my doomerish views stem from an honest view of the state of the world or a deep-seated desire to watch the world burn and finally see a lifetime of consequences catch up to decades of poor choices.


Excellent post---I imagine a lot of us feel that way from time to time (or all the time!).

I'd rather be intelligent and miserable than dumb and comfortable, though.

It's the "red pill/blue pill" question.
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 15:11:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', '
')So I guess--My greatest accomplishment?--I'm not a hooker! :) But how will that look on my obituary?
heh heh. Good for you! well done threadbear. But seriously, that was a good and heartfelt post. I've suffered but not like you have. One thing I can relate to more than anything else is the aspect of being misunderstood. People thinking you have some moral issues when in fact you've been attacked by a virus. It's a cruel fate but you've stood the test. That's the greatest accomplishment. Much as I admire oowolf for his letter from R. Crumb, you are the most accomplished in my book. Your obit should read, "A Brave Soul"
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby Heineken » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 15:19:57

I second those comments. Threadbear is class A.

At some point I will have to tell you guys about the delights of reflex sympathetic dystrophy (also known as chronic regional pain syndrome, with an emphasis on "pain"). But the experience was so terrible I can hardly bear to think about it, much less write about it in any great detail.

But what Threadbear went through was worse, and lasted far longer.
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby threadbear » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 15:22:09

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('uNkNowN ElEmEnt', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ell, although we may not quite be the smartest


I totally disagree with this. I was tested because the social workers could not believe I could endure what I have in life and not have a substance abuse problem... so they thought they would test me (they had the right since I was a ward of the courts)

my IQ was 138, that was also when they found out I had dyslexia, which apparently diminished the score on your tests. "They" also say that people only get along with others who are within about 10 points in either direction on the IQ scale...

and i get along with quite a few people here (which would mean their IQ's have to range between 128 and 148, which is definitely above average) and I know there are smarter people on here than I am...


The dyslexia adhd connection to giftedness is very common in boys and shows up in early grade school where they're usually identified as trouble makers or behaviour problems. In girls it
generally shows up in high school where they start failing grades. Quite appropriately, using this line of reasoning, this is when girls generally become difficult, crazy.

The standard explanation is teenage girls are trying to fit in by not applying themselves. True for some, but it could also be part of a brain pruning process that occurs in adolescance, where certain brain functions are favored over others and neuronal die off occurs. There are a lot of assumptions about girls who fail that draw from a set of political assumptions that have questionable validity.

Did you acquire dyslexia, UE, or did you have it from birth? And by the way, my hats off to you, for surviving your difficulties.

I have a feeling a good half of the members of this forum are people whose limbic systems are slightly more active than others. This can be viewed as a form of damage or as aiding survival, again, depending on perspective. Those who have more limbic activation see sence trouble a mile away, long before others do.
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby threadbear » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 15:39:28

Oh...and thanks Heineken and PMS. Your comments mean the world to me. The people who have it the very very worst are those who suffer from severe clinical depression, or the kind of intense physical pain of the sort you endured, Heineken. Thank God that's over. Being misunderstood in a big way though, certainly qualifies you for membership in Misery Anonymous though. Sigh... :lol: I'd be interested in how you were, are misunderstood PMS, if you feel like "sharing". That term kind of makes me cringe, but it's apt for this discussion. :)
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 15:40:11

I should state truly my best accomplishments. It wasn't that I beat my brother in ping pong. I won second place in the county finals (CIF) in butterfly swimming in high school. Then, after becoming a stoner, I gave that up and joined the local Community College swimming team and placed in the finals there too. It was UE and her figure skating that led me to rethink this and post true. The swimming for the local college was the hardest thing I've ever done as I was so pathetically out of shape and did it anyway. By the end of the season, I could swim ten hundred yard freestyles in a row, all under a minute.
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 15:46:40

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', ' ')Being misunderstood in a big way though, certainly qualifies you for membership in Misery Anonymous though. Sigh... :lol: I'd be interested in how you were, are misunderstood PMS, if you feel like "sharing". That term kind of makes me cringe, but it's apt for this discussion. :)
no problem, my dear. My ears don't work right and I can't make out what people are saying most of the time. People tend to think all sorts of things unless you tell them, "I'm deaf" and it's a pain in the ass to have to tell them. I've even had people tell me, "oh, so that's your excuse". It's the invisible social handicap. "Misery Anonymous;" that's funny. You get it and so do I.
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby threadbear » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 16:13:48

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', ' ')Being misunderstood in a big way though, certainly qualifies you for membership in Misery Anonymous though. Sigh... :lol: I'd be interested in how you were, are misunderstood PMS, if you feel like "sharing". That term kind of makes me cringe, but it's apt for this discussion. :)
no problem, my dear. My ears don't work right and I can't make out what people are saying most of the time. People tend to think all sorts of things unless you tell them, "I'm deaf" and it's a pain in the ass to have to tell them. I've even had people tell me, "oh, so that's your excuse". It's the invisible social handicap. "Misery Anonymous;" that's funny. You get it and so do I.


Interesting PMS. One of my main neuro-problems in high school was an inability to process the spoken word. That's a linear function. You have to do it in sequence--one word at a time, and you have to be able to screen out all of the other sounds around you.

I'm usually lost in conversation, unless it's about something I'm completely familiar with. If I'm able to process a few words out of someone looking at me and going "blah, blah blah, blah blah blah" about something I'm interested in, I could/can fake it. Most people are really surprized to hear I have this difficulty.


In a crowded setting, I'm completely lost because I can't filter out background noise either. It makes for some funny stuff though, which you can probably relate to. Once I was at a party and asked a friend how he was. He looked at me with great concern and said, "I'm panicked about ground squirrels" I just burst out laughing. He had actually said he was "panicked about grad school"

I love communicating through the written word. You too?
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby threadbear » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 16:21:37

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Narz', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mmasters', 'I') suppose just the extreme range of experiences, I don't feel like I'm 27

Teenage years:
    dropped out of high school
    became a serious druggie for a few years
    spent some of those years in mental hospitals


Early 20s to current:
    did construction work
    financed my own college education through market trading
    went to community college then ended up getting a computer science degree from the U of Maryland
    during college discovered myself, resolved my psychological issues and in part did it with the aid of experimental psychedelics
    Decided on a whim after watching Donald Trump's "the Apprentice" to move to NYC and do corporate business projects. A couple months later I was sucessfully consulting on a project at Goldman Sachs (world's top investment bank)
    Sucessfully transitioned from IT to the business side - currently a mid-level business analyst specializing in high net worth client data for a large international bank
    Have managed to survive well and hold my own in NYC for about 3 years
    In the past 2 years have traveled to Mexico, Brazil and Jamaica
    Have no debt

I can relate to alot of that (except for the corporate success bit.

By the way, the post above this one was my GF posting via my account (I told her to sign up for her own).

To answer the poll topic...
  • I survived thru a lonely childhood, five "alternative" boarding schools (one since closed by the Massachusetts Department of Social Services). Also a couple of psych wards for depression when
  • I dropped out of public school at fourteen and another at eighteen when I decided to take a few hundred pills after being homeless for a few weeks after going AWOL from my last boarding school.
  • Getting my GED and a good SAT score and getting into college a few months after.
  • The friends I made in college.
  • Being a bike messenger in New York for 9 months in 2000-'01 (that was fun!). :)
  • Winning a couple of chess tournaments (nothing special, Under 1500 rated)
  • My various, mostly failed entreprenuerial ventures : the most fun being selling books in NYC
  • Getting $25 total from three bored kids in the MidWest for a shareware game I made when I was twelve (uploaded via AOL when I was fifteen).
  • All the people I've met online (my current girlfriend included)
  • Not being afraid to move places, try different jobs, living situations (including living in a van for a few months, I had it set up pretty comfy actually and had access to electricity and running water nearby).
  • All the mental and emotional exploring of myself I've done.
  • All the books I've read.
  • Admiting my current weaknesses but not resigning myself to them.
  • Everything nice I've ever done for anyone.
  • Any time I ever stuck up for someone being teased/bullied.
  • Being a good "father" to my two cats. :-D
  • All the times in my life I've had fun :) (what is a bigger accmplishment than that, to gain the world but not enjoy it would be quite a waste)


McMasters, You're amazing. Whooo boy. Only 27? Lord. You must be a force to contend with. Congrats!

Wow Narz, Five boarding schools? How old were you when you were sent away? So sorry to hear about your attempted overdose and homelessness. That is the bleakest of bleak experiences. It certainly has paved the way for some peak experiences for you, though, it seems. Aren't you a testament to the triumph of the human spirit. You went through all of that and you haven't become bitter, but stick up for those who are downtrodden and bullied.
Do you think you would have turned out to be such a good person if you hadn't been through all of that?
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 16:34:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', '
')I love communicating through the written word. You too?
yep, you read my mind.
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby PrairieMule » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 16:39:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', '
')
I just wanted to speak up for the homeless schizophrenics, drug addicts, hookers and others who might be considered life's losers. For people battling major demons of one kind or another, just being able to face the day after waking up in a psyche ward, under a bridge or in a hotel that rents room by the hour, is testament to profound courage. It all depends on your perspective. It's one thing to face the abyss and come through it, it's another to face it in perpetuity.


You know what TB? That alone speaks volumes. In the end the people who do that are more heroic because they have pushed themselves far than they would have summiting Everest. You should put that at the top of your "Things Accomplished" list.

Tip of the hat to you.
If you give a man a fish you will have kept him from hunger for a day. If you teach a man to fish he will sit in a boat and drink beer all day.
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 17:01:08

Another thing I'm proud of, I once subbed for a pre-calculus class for a week. When I told them it was my last day they gave me an ovation. I gave them impromptu lectures on math and they were very much into it. I'd give anything to have intelligent students to teach, but I can't handle the discipline side of it. I need good wills and shrug off the malcontents. If the malcontents rule the roost, I just shrug and say, "see ya later"
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby Narz » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 17:02:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Narz', 'H')einekan,

That ELS(D) sounds really interesting.
I'm on unemployment right now and am trying desperately to avoid returning to the "corporate cube!"

What kind of job did you get with that degree. I tried looking it up on google but did not come up with anything.

Can you please give me some info about the degree?

My college major was Lit. and I feel lost as to how to make money outside of the "cube."


It is not a degree, Narz, it's a certification. Here's the link to the website of the organization that issues it:

http://www.bels.org/

Earning an ELS(D) is fairly involved (click on "Interested in Becoming a Board-Certified Editor?" and go from there). The first step is ELS, not ELS(D).

After 27 years of doing it (including a 7-year stint at Science mag), I finally dropped out of editing (and retired). Although I was something of a whiz at manuscript editing, I ultimately found it frustrating and unfulfilling. I often turned authors' papers from garbage into gold, but they got all the credit and all the glory and often failed to acknowledge my contributions. An amazing number of people out there think that all editors do is correct spelling and "fix the grammar." Nothing could be further from the truth.

I got into a huge argument with Rockdoc over this subject some years ago. He felt that only geologists should be allowed to edit other geologists' papers. He couldn't grasp the value of having input from an experienced wordsmith. He really pissed me off with his ignorance on the matter, and I actually put him on ignore, where he's been ever since.

Anyway, I second all the comments saying in essence that things like overcoming adversity, nurturing children, growing food, saving lives, and hiking in the wilderness matter most in the list of accomplishments.

Some extraordinary posts in this forum, BTW. I've come to think of people like Threadbear, Woodcutter, Madpaddy, and so many others as virtual mentors. How I wish we all lived in the same town, or on the same farm. Utopia . . . maybe.


Thanks Heinekan!!! I am actually leaning towards environmental law. Science editing doesn't exactly sound like something I'd be interested in. It seems almost impossible to make money without staring at a computer all day (for a woman, anyway (this is Narz's girlfriend, Jamie, posting!) Then, if one wants to eventually have babies, that makes a full time career very difficult if one wants to be a good mother and also breast feed for a few years.
I am open to any suggestions anyone may have for having a family while earning money doing something somewhat interesting and non-oppositional to the beliefs most of us have here (ie. I do not want to work for Merk or Enron again!)
I should really register, as I really like to lurk here. Everyone seems to have so much knowledge to share!
“Seek simplicity but distrust it”
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby firestarter » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 17:09:06

Narz, mmasters,

I spent years as a high school teacher and taught many students who experienced incredibly disadvantaged circumstances in their lives ( I taught In Chicago). I had much too much compassion for them and ultimately had to quit the profession because of the utter contempt the school establishment manifest toward them. The end game for me came when I read John Taylor Gatto's, Underground History which helped me realize I was doing more harm than good (in that canned setting), so I quit. I don't miss one bit of the bureaucratic, administrative and pseudo scientific nightmare that teaching entailed, but your words brought to mind what I did LOVE about the profession--the young adults, especially the outliers like yourselves (without going into detail I was an outlier also--big time!). Thanks for sharing. You made my day.
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Re: What Are Your Greatest Personal Accomplishments?

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 17:19:39

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('firestarter', 'N')arz, mmasters,

I spent years as a high school teacher and taught many students who experienced incredibly disadvantaged circumstances in their lives ( I taught In Chicago). I had much too much compassion for them and ultimately had to quit the profession because of the utter contempt the school establishment manifest toward them. The end game for me came when I read John Taylor Gatto's, Underground History which helped me realize I was doing more harm than good (in that canned setting), so I quit. I don't miss one bit of the bureaucratic, administrative and pseudo scientific nightmare that teaching entailed, but your words brought to mind what I did LOVE about the profession--the young adults, especially the outliers like yourselves (without going into detail I was an outlier also--big time!). Thanks for sharing. You made my day.
why does anyone go into this profession? because of love for culture and learning. These are bad times, but I read of a French Teacher who suffered greatly in the 1840s because the kids were monsters. Same thing in the writings of Laurence Durrell. It is the great project to train the next generation in civilization. Not an easy task. Failure, though, means unspeakable horror.
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