Sunday, June 07, 2009

It's The Amateur Dream Analysis Show!

Because the only thing Blogger needs more than angst-ridden poetry and LOL cats is people rambling on about their dreams. That being said...

A friend of mine and I have both been having persistent dreams about being lost/trapped in buildings. For me, it's a shopping mall/hotel complex with a weird princess-themed restaurant, in which I have tried, unsuccessfully, to pick up waitresses in hoop skirts and tiaras. Comparatively, his is a much more normal, multi-story maze of rooms. In my dream, I'm usually just wandering around, lost, while he has a very definite need to escape the building.

My thoughts so far:

Okay, so Zolar's Dictionary (Amazon link here: http://tinyurl.com/ly9p9r) says a dream of a very tall building indicates you "will have much success." Faces of strangers means you will have a "change of residence," while being stuck in a maze could mean you either, "are surrounded by unhappiness," or should, "beware of domination by insincere friends."

But that's all just a bunch of new age mumbo-jumbo.


The wife (who's had more psych classes than I) says that a building in a dream is a symbol for one's own mind. So if I were to play shrink, I'd say that the "unknown but important reason" for you to get out of the maze is that your mind is trying to work it's way through some problem.

If that's true, then the "lost in a building" dream is probably a pretty common one, much like the "showing up for a test completely unprepared" dream that most of us have had at least once. The particulars of these dreams, of course, vary from person to person, and focusing on those particulars may give some insight into what our mind is trying to tell us.

For me, the dreams always center around retail environments. That makes sense, considering that I spend most of my offline time trying to sell things. The sense of being lost is, I think, a projection of my desire to, once and for all, figure out how to be really good at selling. To extend the metaphor, the failed attempt with the waitress could be my fear of failing with a customer.

Why she's wearing a hoop skirt and tiara (and waving a little fairy-wand, now that I think about it) is anybody's guess.

The Himalayan Mixtape Project Continues

Your suggestions so far:
  • Shake It Up - Yes!
  • Stand Back - More of a parachute ride song, if you ask me, but I'm willing to give it a go.
  • Sweet Child O' Mine - This, or Paradise City; I'm still deciding.
  • Rock of Ages - Yes!
Also, I seem to recall hearing "Heart of Glass," on at least one ride.

This is going to be a little tougher than I thought. The songs need to be upbeat & high energy, a la Rock of Ages, but not too angry. Welcome to the Jungle, for example, would be just a hair over the line.

Wednesday, June 03, 2009

My Himalayan Mixtape

The great thing about writing a blog that's read by tens of people (hi mom!) is that I can, on a whim, call upon your combined brain-power, thereby saving me the trouble of using my own.

That being said, and bearing in mind that you failed me miserably the last time I asked for help, here's your assignment: I want to compile a mixtape for my 40 minute commute to work. I need it to be upbeat and high-energy to get me "pumped up," about selling theaters and theatre accessories for 8 - 10 hours. My solution: the music they play on the "Himalaya" ride at the traveling carnival.

So, dear reader, leave me a comment with the song or songs you best remember being played (or think would be played) as the soundtrack for a tilted, supercharged carousel. I have a few songs already in mind, but I don't want to skew the results.

All I'll say is, "Fox on the Run."

Photo by sambeaner77.

Monday, June 01, 2009

I Just Deleted the "Most Recently Played" Sidebar

I've realized that most of the music I listen to is either via iTunes radio (or the Rhythmbox equivalent when I'm booted into Linux) or other streaming sites. These services do not play nicely with Last.FM, or Last.FM hasn't figured out how to collect information from them, I don't know. The point is that unless I'm streaming music from Last.FM or listening to my library on iTunes, Last.FM doesn't have a clue what I'm listening to and the results get all screwy.

For example: according to Last.FM, my current favorite artist is Brian Eno, and the last time I listened to music was on Friday, when I listened to the entirety of the Sigur Rós album "Ágætis Byrjun." Now, I did indeed listen to "Ágætis Byrjun" on Friday (and enjoyed it very much, thank you) but I've since listened to Miles Davis' "Kind of Blue," DJ Shadow's "Preemptive Strike," and a collection of Jonathan Coulton songs on the CD player in my car. I also listened to an hour or two of Classical Music on Magnatune while doing some homework.

As far as I can tell, Last.FM has no way of when I listen to music on anything other than iTunes, iPod, or their site. And there's nothing wrong with that, I guess, if that's how the majority of their users listen to music. I don't, and so my "Recently Played" box has been empty for the past few months. I finally got tired of looking at it and just deleted it.

Enjoy the new sidebar with tons of Amazon.commy action!

Why I Follow William Gibson on Twitter

So William Gibson has a Twitter account that less than 8,000 people follow.

To be clear, I'm talking about the author of cyberpunk classics like Neuromancer and Johnny Mnemonic; the man who made "cyberspace" a household word; probably the first science fiction author you would think of if I said to you, "internet." And he has less than 8,000 people following him.

To put this into perspective:
I guess this would be understandable if his "tweets" were the usual, "I'm having breakfast with the fam, I made bacon!" sort of prattle. (Or Mr. Wheaton's color commentary on the NHL playoffs, for that matter.) But here's the thing, William Gibson always, ALWAYS has the good shit, AND HE SHARES IT WITH YOU:

EXEMPLI GRATIA:

"Black Cable" in and Around DC (a growing problem for developers):
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/05/30/AR2009053002114_pf.html

Bicycle Parkour in Scotland:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z19zFlPah-o

And this, about which I can think of nothing more to say than, "very, very cool, go check it out."
http://www.flickr.com/groups/lookingintothepast/pool/