...Waiting for the fish to bite or waiting for wind to fly a kite. Or waiting around for Friday night or waiting perhaps for their Uncle Jake or a pot to boil or a better break or a string of pearls or a pair of pants or a wig with curls or another chance. Everyone is just waiting...
-Dr. Seuss

Thursday, April 17

Extreme Commuting

This is what economists call "the commuting paradox." Most people travel long distances with the idea that they'll accept the burden for something better, be it a house, salary, or school. They presume the trade-off is worth the agony. But studies show that commuters are on average much less satisfied with their lives than noncommuters. A commuter who travels one hour, one way, would have to make 40% more than his current salary to be as fully satisfied with his life as a noncommuter, say economists Bruno S. Frey and Alois Stutzer of the University of Zurich's Institute for Empirical Research in Economics. People usually overestimate the value of the things they'll obtain by commuting -- more money, more material goods, more prestige -- and underestimate the benefit of what they are losing: social connections, hobbies, and health. "Commuting is a stress that doesn't pay off," says Stutzer.

Read the whole article here.

For Cat Lovers




Sunday, April 13

43 Things

A site that inspires action.

Write down your goals

People have known for years that making a list of goals is the best way to achieve them. Why is that? First, getting your goals in writing can help you clarify what you really want to do. You might find you have some important and some frivolous goals. That is OK. You’ve got space for 43 Things on your list. Not every one of them has to change the world (but save room for the ones that might).

My 43 Things
1. Complete a Half Ironman
2. Learn to cry
3. Pay off my student loans
4. Keep a journal
5. Learn to Sail
6. Go to grad school
7. Learn to juggle
8. Learn to salsa dance
9. Overcome my fear of the ocean
10. Make more friends
11. Get a new job
12. Stick up for people
13. Experiment
14. Create art
15. Drink a Sour Toe cocktail
16. Travel like a gypsy
17. Go to Walden Pond and read Thoreau will drifting in a canoe
18. Witness a total solar eclipse
19. Be humble
20. Tell people what I really think
21. Write more thank you notes and write them on time
22. Learn Russian
23. Promote peace
24. Step of the back of Ann Coulter's shoe heel
25. Escape from Alcatraz
26. Plant a garden
27. See Bizet's Opera "The Pearl Fishers"
28. Have children in the next 10 years
29. Write a note to my younger self about something I didn't know then
30. Write a children's book
31. Buy an old house and fix it up
32. Live without a car
33. Send postcards
34. Thank my parents
35. Take more pictures
36. Move out of L.A.
37. Eat less processed food
38. Organize my photos
39. Use all the yarn I've bought
40. Expand my vocabulary
41. Nurture my friendships
42. Leave random notes for strangers to find
43. Travel more

Saturday, April 12

Music & Life

Friday, April 11

Why seize the day?


A sage young man once noted, "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop to look around once in a while you could miss it. "