Monday, December 18, 2006

Dreams

There is not much inside my keyboard this morning. I turned it upside-down and tapped on it to see if anything would come out, just a couple of specs of dust. No jobs. It’s the last week before Christmas so I don’t expect anything to drop in my lap. I must write about something, so let’s start with my dreams.

The dream I had last night was particularly disturbing. In my dream, my dog escaped from me, leash dangling behind. A short while later, the dog returned, pulling something that got snagged in the leash, a little red wagon which carried a small child just old enough to sit up, and a cat with four kittens that were about a day old. The neighborhood was empty and the consequences of my being in possession of some stranger’s child cascaded in my head. Who would believe that my dog brought the baby home?

Dreams can be a good source for fictional stories, but my research has led me to theorize that dreams are the products of emotions which are created by the brain’s need to evacuate excess neurotransmitter chemicals. In waking life, the outside world shows us things to which we react. We see things, we feel emotions, and then we react to the situation.

The emotions we feel when we see things are so subtle that most of the time we don’t have to think about it. They become subtle because we get used to seeing and reacting to the same things in the same way, day in and day out.

Certain situations occur in our lives where we go for a long period of time without feeling a certain emotion. This happens all the time, but our brains have become used to exercising that particular node on a regular basis, and produces the necessary chemicals needed for that node’s function. When that node is inactive, excess chemicals build up that can only be safely eliminated when we sleep.

The neuro-connections to our arms and legs are stifled when we sleep for a good reason. We would thrash around wildly as our brains eliminated the excess buildup of transmitter chemicals related to physical exercise and fitness. Some people are unable to temporarily sever this connection and they sleepwalk, or thrash around in their sleep. Endless sleep studies have documented this on video.

This phenomenon also occurs with our emotional centers, and we then remember our dreams the next morning. When our normal routines become predictable over time, we begin to feel that our dreams predict the future. But, what our dreams are really predicting is someone else’s routine behavior that we forgot before.

One day I head someone proclaim in amazement “I hadn’t heard from her in a long time, I was just thinking about her and just then she called!” The long time turned out to be exactly a year, and the reason she called was because it was her birthday, and she calls at exactly the same time of day each year.

Our brains are reminding us of routine events in subtle ways that we either ignore altogether, or ascribe to some mystical deity. Theologians have known about this since Emperor Constantine. This is the big secret of the Illuminati. Once they recognized just how predictable people were, and recognized that dreams were reminders, they compared the behavior of the public to that of their giant stone astronomical observatories, and eureka, people are as predictable as the stars and thus subject to manipulation and subjugation through mysticism!

Thursday, December 14, 2006

A new life for an old man?

I'm starting over. Right now I'm where I was supposed to be over twenty years ago. Just out of college and looking for a job. But I'm 42 years old. Seven years ago it was different.

Seven years ago I was working in the cable television advertising industry making about $14 per hour. I had a house full of furniture on an acre lot in a nice neighborhood, and I was starting to settle down and save money for my retirement.

But in the months following the WorldCom scandal, AT&T laid off thousands of people based on fears that stemmed from the fictional profits of Worldcom (C Michael Armstrong admitted it on CNBC), and the ripple effect led to the the layoffs of myself, my co-producer and four sales people from our department.

That was in June of 2001. In the following months, finding work became very difficult, especially in the wake of the attacks on the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001. I had probably four interviews from distributing over three hundred resumes.

I finally had to settle on retail work. There was something seriously wrong with this picture. I was unable to sustain home ownership, and was getting further into debt. I finally had to give it all up when my home's well dried up and broke the pump twice. I lived on bottled water for eleven months, trying to save up enough to get my well pump fixed. The funds never materialized. I wound up selling my house and moving in with my mother.

My only alternative was to get a Bachelors Degree, since my Associate Degree proved worthless. You get a one shot deal right out of higher education. You have to get a job while you are still in school. If you are out of school for more than a couple of months and you are still looking for work, you are as good as dead.

So here I am. I finished school just last week. I'm waiting for my final grades. I have a 3.2 GPA. which isn't perfect. I made the Dean's list at UIS once. I made the Dean's list twice at Ivy Tech State College in Indiana and my GPA there was 3.375 . My overall final military evaluation was 3.8 and I got an Honorable Discharge (DD-214) and a Good Conduct Medal after my term of service was up. I worked for eight years at AT&T Media Services before getting laid off, and before that, I was never fired or terminated for reasons other than my own choosing.

Just this September, I was hired at Watts Copy System to do graphic design work. They fired me just last week for "poor quality of work" which was a option on a multiple-choice form with a little circle that was filled-in. There were no other written comments on the form, think about it.
So here it is, almost Christmas. I have not been able to celebrate Christmas since December of 2001. The whole issue about holiday stress is being able to meet the expectations of others. Since I will never meet the expectations of others, I choose to reject the rituals by which everyone else is programmed to try to meet the expectations of others.

Every event I must attend that celebrates the culturally programmed achievements of other members of my family (i.e. weddings, etc.) is like a slap in my face. Every holiday card included with with bragging letters is infuriating, but I take comfort in my not having any credit cards, nor any debt of which to speak.

Regarding work, I want to take the high-road of education instead of the low-road of marketing, but the indignities of my social status, and the relative treatment one such as myself receives for it, makes me want to take advantage of the subconscious minds of those "status conscious" braggarts.

I'm getting a BA in Communication at UIS. On my own I studied Psychology and Sociology. There seemed a visible divide between Communication and Psychology curricula, perhaps for ethical reasons that I was all too happy to breach. One of the most inspirational books I read on the subject was Rebecca Lemov's "World as Laboratory: Experiments with Mice, Mazes, and Men."

I once published all of my notes and bibliography of reading material at www.spfld.net, but I have since removed it because I have to make a living too.