Most people experience the world around them as normal. While a farmer friend in a distant state expresses appreciation for good weather and a productive growing season, a friend in a distant country is grateful that the latest barrage of missiles did not destroy his apartment complex. The appreciative farmer views a productive farm as normal. The grateful apartment dweller considers missiles raining from the sky as normal. In fact, though, neither experience is normal. Normal does not exist; not as we might think. The state of being that we call normal is just a deviation from chaos. How can a person who has never wanted for anything be considered normal? He can’t, because there are so few like him. But how about the person who has lived her whole life just a day away from starvation? She’s normal, if for no other reason than she lives among thousands who face the same threat. I argue against myself so often; my win-loss record is about 50-50. Sometimes, seeing matters from multiple perspectives is a curse; from those points of view, it is possible to see that solutions and contradictions pair poorly with problems and harmonies.
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For the first ten or fifteen minutes of last night’s debate, I worried that it would not go the way I hoped and expected. Trump was unexpectedly coherent and focused in those first few minutes, while I thought Harris seemed wooden and weak. But then it changed—completely. I was not as enamored of Harris’ performance later in the debate, as were the network anchors, but she improved dramatically in short order, while Trump dissolved into the pathological liar I have always believed him to be. Some of what Trump said was simply incoherent; most of the rest, extreme distortion and pure fabrication. Despite the obvious differences between the candidates, I fear the possibility that Trump could win; every rational American of voting age MUST be registered and vote in November to avoid that existential horror.
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Finally, only five months after the initial deadline, my taxes have been filed. I requested an extension, not because my return is complex but because I was lazy. I will get a combined $8 refund between State and Federal taxes. I prefer to keep my money, as opposed to lending it to taxing authorities.
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Just across the driveway, high up in the branches of a big oak tree, I see what appears to be delicately shaped crystalline Christmas decorations. When I look to the right or left, I see glass globes dancing wildly with every gust of wind. The shiny spheres are green and yellow, the same colors as the leaves of the tree. And so are the images of the bearded man and the tall, thin woman. These images—all of them—are the result of a psychological phenomenon called pareidolia, which causes people to ascribe meaning to random patterns. I wrote about pareidolia on a post about six years ago. I had to think hard about the word this morning before I remembered its meaning. As soon as it clicked with me, I started remembering seeing images in clouds’ puffiness; dogs, cats, sailing ships, human forms, etc., etc. Perhaps one day I will have to work hard to remember images of glass globes in trees.