PROMPT: Pandemic

Daily writing prompt
How have you adapted to the changes brought on by the Covid-19 pandemic?

That’s so far in the rearview that I can’t remember. I’m thinking about the next one. It’ll be here before you know it.

I’m not quite sure what to do about it now that the CDC guidelines are to drink a shot of bleach each morning for the germs and take one bath in raw sewage before bedtime each evening for a robust immune system.

Barbed Wire Highway [Senryū]

Photograph of fire ants on a strand of barbed wire in the countryside near Vang Vieng, Laos.
fire ant highway
on a barbed wire strand
makes me itch.

Dragonfly Eye [Lyric Poem]

Photograph taken at Don Mueang Temple in the north Bangkok suburbs, features waterlilies in the fore and guardian statues in the background.
The dragonfly strafing lilies 
doesn't know how very silly
a bantam taller than a ram
seems to a ram tall as a filly.

DAILY PHOTO: Turquoise Waters of Kuang Si

Photograph of bathers at Kuang Si waterfall in Ban Long, Laos.
Photograph of teal water at one of the terraced drop offs of Kuang Si waterfall in Laos.
Photograph of a cascade and turquoise pool at Kuang Si waterfall in Laos.
Photograph of rushing water and a teal pool at Kuang Si waterfall in Laos.

24/7 Wakeup Call [Lyric Poem]

Photograph taken from Wat Pa Phon Phoa at Luang Prabang, Laos.
In a mountain village,
the roosters crow all day.
Hopes of mid-day napping
are dashed along the way.

PROMPT: Morning Rituals

Daily writing prompt
What are your morning rituals? What does the first hour of your day look like?

Well, I poop… How much detail are you looking for here?

Mountain Azalea [Lyric Poem]

Photograph of a cluster of pink Mountain Azalea with barren woods in the background. Taken on the Sawnee Mountain Trail in North Georgia.
One cluster of Mountain Azalea
Stands out like royal regalia,
Adorning a near naked vagrant --
But much more pleasingly fragrant.

Blue Sky [Haiku]

Photograph of bare trees and blue sky taken on the Sawnee Mountain Trail in North Georgia, near Cumming.
blue sky
seen through bare limbs;
when will Spring arrive?

DAILY PHOTO: Scenes From the North Laos Countryside

Photograph of creek, farmland, and mountains near Nam Dee, Luang Namtha, Laos.
Photograph of farmland and mountains near Nam Dee, Luang Namtha, Laos.
Photograph of creek, farmland, and mountains near Nam Dee, Luang Namtha, Laos.

BOOK: “Captivate” by Vanessa Van Edwards

Captivate: The Science of Succeeding with PeopleCaptivate: The Science of Succeeding with People by Vanessa Van Edwards
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Publisher Site – Penguin

Van Edwards draws on a variety of popular social science research (others’ as well as her own) to build a soup-to-nuts guide to being more personable. The fourteen chapters of the book are organized into three parts that begin with how to spark a relationship, then how to deepen the relationship through better understanding of the other person, and finally how to sustain the relationship through behaviors that help make one more likeable. Overall, I found the book to be useful and informative, and felt it was successful as a mile-high overview of the subject.

Getting down in the weeds, however, I had some difficulties with the book. As a book that draws on varied research, it’s only as good as the research it’s relying upon at a given point, making the book a bit of a mixed bag. For example, Chapter six is based heavily Paul Ekman’s work on micro-expressions, the idea that our true feelings always leak through in tiny uncontrollable facial expressions that a careful observer can read, it is research that has not performed well under attempted validation and is now widely in doubt. This speaks to a bigger issue with the underpinnings of the book. Van Edwards’ book presents a kind of anti-thesis to another pop social science book, Malcolm Gladwell’s Talking to Strangers. Gladwell’s argument, drawing on research such as that by Timothy R. Levine, is that it’s dangerous to think one can “read” [or to use Van Edward’s term “decode”] people through communication with them because some people have highly mismatched communication styles (i.e. neither their language nor their body language are necessarily consistent with their internal feelings.) Captivate, however, takes the view that one can decode other peoples’ inner worlds.

One may wonder why I’m more in Gladwell’s camp on this issue, certainly he has gotten a lot of flack for his books over the years — including the book that I mention here. I’m certainly not arguing the Gladwell book is infallible. On the point in question, however, I’ve noticed a larger pattern that goes like this: a.) everybody is a bit unnerved because we have no insight into the subjective mental experience of anyone else. b.) because of this anxiety, many people are willing to take a white-knuckled grip on any proposed method — science or snake-oil — that suggests it can eliminate this uncertainty; c.) these methods often survive long after they’ve been dismissed by advancements in the research (or successfully gain traction, despite not being backed by any sound study.) Combine all of that with the fact that what I’ve witnessed is that people are much worse at reading minds than they usually think themselves to be (and “experts” most of all,) leads me to favor the view that it is always and everywhere an activity fraught with danger.

I recommend this book for those seeking to learn how to be more personable, with the proviso to take the book’s midsection — which deals with how to hack the minds of other people — with a heavy pinch of salt.

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