One of the more entertaining aspects of the web is the ability for the website’s manager/blogger to see the search strings people use to find his site.
Question/search engine string: “How to underwrite brain damage”.
Answer: Carefully.
One of the more entertaining aspects of the web is the ability for the website’s manager/blogger to see the search strings people use to find his site.
Question/search engine string: “How to underwrite brain damage”.
Answer: Carefully.
In the abstract it is easy to say that doing the right thing is – at the very least – reporting the improper activity. But what if your report seems to be ignored? Are you off the hook and have no further responsibility? Even worse, if you do report it and your boss survives with nothing more than a reprimand, what might this do to your personal well-being and your future with the company? In theory, of course, you could quit your job and find another; but in this economy, is that possible? Is now the right time to put you and your family’s financial future at risk? You could go halfway and say nothing while you look for another job, but is that the right thing to do? This type of enigma is not an academic exercise. Anyone who has ever been in the business world, with ambitions to be successful and rise up the pyramid and support a family knows this type situation – and a wide variety of others – is more reality than theory. The real questions are: At what point are you willing to dilute or even trade in “doing the right thing,” to protect your career by “going along to get along”? At what point do you break and become willing to rationalize the elements of “doing the right thing?”
via What’s So Hard about Doing the Right Thing?.
Bob’s right. Read his entire blog post to understand why it is not easy to do the right thing. Thanks Bob and please keep writing and sharing.
It’s been a rough year weather-wise out here in OK. Not that I’m keeping count but in the past year we have experienced:
If you’ve never experienced an earthquake your brain starts firing off like crazy trying to figure out what’s happening. The noise is one of the strangest noises I have heard in my life. Did something hit the roof? But when the house started shaking I said “Earthquake”!!!!
Then I went back to sleep.
Our life, as individual persons and as members of a perplexed and struggling race, provokes us with the evidence that it must have meaning. Part of the meaning still escapes us. Yet our purpose in life is to discover this meaning, and live according to it. We have, therefore, something to live for. The process of living, of growing up, and becoming a person, is precisely the gradually increasing awareness of what that something is. This is a difficult task, for many reasons.
Thomas Merton No Man is an Island
How fitting a coincidence that this is my 1000th post.
If you believe in coincidences.
Watershed
by Emily Saliers
Thought I knew my mind like the back of my hand,
The gold and the rainbow, but nothing panned out as I planned.
And they say only milk and honey’s gonna make your soul satisfied!
Well I better learn how to swim
Cause the crossing is chilly and wide.
Twisted guardrail on the highway, broken glass on the cement
A ghost of someone’s tragedy
How recklessly my time has been spent.
And they say that it’s never too late, but you don’t get any younger!
Well I better learn how to starve the emptiness
And feed the hunger
Up on the watershed, standing at the fork in the road
You can stand there and agonize
Till your agony’s your heaviest load.
You’ll never fly as the crow flies, get used to a country mile.
When you’re learning to face the path at your pace
Every choice is worth your while.
Well there’s always retrospect to light a clearer path
Every five years or so I look back on my life
And I have a good laugh.
You start at the top, go full circle round
Catch a breeze, take a spill
But ending up where i started again makes me wanna stand still.
Stepping on a crack, breaking up and looking back
Every tree limb overhead just seems to sit and wait.
Until every step you take becomes a twist of fate.
Hacked! – Magazine – The Atlantic
If you read just one article this year on password security, read this one. This is a must read.

Wilson Greatbatch dies, invented pacemaker – Houston Chronicle
“Our mental hospitals are full of people who couldn’t stand success, or who couldn’t stand failure,”

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