by Pops » Tue 01 Aug 2006, 10:14:06
I was one of those nerdy types that read under the covers with a flashlight as a kid, I think reading is the most important thing one can teach their offspring. I’ve been going the library on Saturdays with kids and grandkids since forever – it was kind of our weekend outing that replaced going to church. We would get all dressed up, collect some likely books and then they’d find some kids to read or play with and afterwards we would sometimes stop at the park, farmers' market (my oldest granddaughter called it The Festival when she was little) museum, antique store or maybe just The Slushy Store.
Since we don’t have any kids or grandkids around at the moment and our library is rather small I use the internet more and more. The internet is a wonderful source of information, a quick overview at Wikipedia or an afternoon spent trawling the most arcane topic deeper than I would have ever imagined possible. I rarely read fiction any more though I once read quite a bit and though I love the magazine rack at the big bookstores the internet has eliminated that addiction too.
I don’t read or concentrate much on abstract stuff – my brain isn’t wired that way! Math past high school geometry (really anything past pie are square ;>) ), psychology, sociology and what-all are over my head because for the most part I can’t make a visual model in my little brain.
As far as how I think, I suppose I do a little of both linear and non-linear. I’ll research a topic of interest or concentrate on a specific problem, design or project till my eyes cross then I’ll leave it alone. It usually seems when I come back to it I’ll have a fresh insight, realize a simpler or seemingly obvious solution – it drives my wife a little crazy sometimes because she is a get-it-done kind of gal
Speaking of getting it done, I ain’t, so I better!
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)