As we as a society move further and further away from the idea of Thanksgiving – I mean, people now call it Turkey Day – I figured I’d put some thoughts in about thankfulness and why it’s important. I think that generally we don’t allow ourselves to take the time to think about what’s important in life and to appreciate what we have. Today for me is serving as a reminder that every moment doesn’t need to be filled with stimulation, or productivity, or exercise. I don’t have to pull out my phone to check email when I am sitting at a red light. I can pause, and maybe even spend some time with my thoughts.

It’s easy to get caught up in the momentum of our daily lives, and let the flow of moving swiftly from one thing to another be a strong guiding force. In fact, I think that modern society often demands this – a kind of expectation that things will always be busy, and that things should be busy. But when we are always focused on where to get to next, and what else to do, or what we should be doing, a kind of tunnel vision can envelop us that cuts us off from the interesting, the novel, and the beauty inherent in so much of the world. I can certainly get lost in the momentum of things as well, and I want to make it a priority to give myself the chance to be productive and feel good about what I am accomplishing, but also to be able to just sometimes pause. Stop and know that not only is it ok to slow down for a bit, but that to stop, to experience the world, and to notice is healthy. It’s what we’re here for.

So even though we’re a couple days past Thanksgiving now, I’m thankful for the world, for the people that make it so interesting, for the wind that is blowing the yellow, red, and brown leaves off of the trees on my street. I’m thankful that every day I can, if I choose, find something novel and new to try, to see, or I can find new people to meet.

Alright, enjoy the rest of your weekends.

Since I said I was growing a mustache this month, I figure I might as well put an update or two on here, so that at the very least I can look back on this site in a couple of years and remember how goofy I looked.

week 2 stache

Yeah, that’s me at about 10 days in. On the plus side, I’ve received $100 in donations, so at least there is worth in this. I mean, $100 won’t cure cancer, but every amount helps fund needed research into ways to fight cancer. If it means I look funny for a month, well, I just think about all the people who go through chemotherapy and lose all their hair, and then it really doesn’t bother me to be growing a mustache at all.

homerGarrr! Tangling with the demonic (not very) WYSIWYG WordPress editor. I’m going to have to do some research to make some of the new pages I’m putting up here look nice and pretty. Why didn’t I study something useful in school like engineering or computer science instead of something with no applicability to any daily activity (neuroscience). The brain is insanely, awesomely cool, but we still don’t know how to hack it.

As someone operating primarily in the online domain for what I have been doing in the last year, I sometimes struggle with figuring out the impact of different social media strategies and how to quantitatively measure the impact that social media can have in any of my online pursuits. Frankly, there are times when it seems like using social media is a lot of work, but when you can generate real dialogue between you and a potential customer it becomes very worthwhile.

(I’ve also been experimenting with different ways to streamline updating content in different locations and Posterous may be an excellent tool for that.)

If you ever doubt the impact of social media -  now and in the future – take a look at this excellent short video, and wrap your head around some of those eye-popping stats. (I do have one critique though, which is that Facebook’s total time to reach 50 million viewers isn’t given – it just gives 100 million in 9 months, which ignores the years in which Facebook was primarily a tool for college kids to connect.) Regardless, still interesting stuff.

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