Apr. 16th, 2009

grammarwoman: (Default)
I am stuck in a weird head space right now.

There was this Working Women's Expo thing I wanted to go to, but...I just couldn't bring myself to leave early to attend. It goes on until 7 tonight, so it's not like I don't have time, I just...Blah.

I think part of the weirdness is waking up early and not being able to go back to sleep. I'm not so much tired as spacey and unstable.

I'm also seriously confused at my self-sabotage when it comes to getting back to a healthy weight. I mean, GOD, I saw my reflection in an office window today, and that was not my ass, dammit. Who zipped me into a fat suit when I wasn't looking?

Commence the griping and sniping )

Gah, enough. I meant to do a post of interesting links, and here I wandered into emo territory. Sorry. Next one will be better.
grammarwoman: (Default)
As a kid, I loved the short scientific investigation summaries posted in "Reader's Digest" and other such short attention-span magazines. There'd be just enough detail to go "Wow, neat!" without getting bogged down in all the technical language.

I just found a website right up my alley, Not Exactly Rocket Science, full of interesting bits and blurbs.

Let's see...[livejournal.com profile] wiliqueen, you might enjoy this one: Ballet postures have become more extreme over time. It's a fascinating look at how audience expectations have shaped ballet moves over the last century.

Or two that hit a little closer to home for me: Autistic children are less sensitive to the movements of living things (which links to the lose-some-time body walking simulation tool, Bio Motion Lab) and Playing shoot-em-up video games can improve some aspects of vision, which makes me feel better about how much time the Emperor has been spending playing Lego Star Wars.

Or this one, which makes me want to send it to all the teachers I know: Simple writing exercise helps break vicious cycle that holds back black students.

For all I know, these are the worst of pop reporting, based on sketchy studies and bad science. They are still cool to read.
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