Thursday, September 25, 2008
Wild Sex.
But anyway...
So I was watching Wild Sex, see, and the episode was about "deviant sexual behavior" of those in the animal kingdom (not including ours since any deviant form of sexual behavior on our end, you can easily watch on Law and Order Special Victims Unit).
...................
There are transvestite garter snakes. Yes. Transvestite snakes. And when they mate, they gather in this massive, shallow pool of slippery, slithery snake spaghetti, all vying to f*ck the much larger, but very few female snakes... who are victims of violent prodding and poking by overzealous, horny little noodles. Since some male snakes can't compete, the "transvestite" male snakes have the ability to emit the same female hormone that help the male snakes determine where the female is in all the orgy-like confusion. Once the transvestites have fooled the other males, they can freely begin to search for the real female without much hindrance.
Unfortunately, some of the male snakes are fooled too much to a fault and as an occupational hazard, some transvestites are first raped into submission before they can go about their business of heterosexual mating.
Wow.
What some men would do for a little booty, ey? *ahem*
Moving on...
Then there's the seahorse. (Now, I don't think the men would like this to ever happen to them though I think most women would find this strangely romantic). When the male and the female mate, the females eggs are sucked in by the male and are fertilized inside him. So for the duration of the child-bearing process, it's the male with the big ol' belly fending for himself while the female only visits him ocassionally.
Now where in the evolutionary process did WE go wrong????
Jeez.
....................
But apparently, the most deviant form of sexual behavior in the animal kingdom is...
*drum roll please*
*drum rolling*
*drum still rolling*
***you wouldn't believe...
MONOGAMY.
Penguins, Seagulls, Swans.
Humans.
..........................
Let's defy the norm, shall we? *wink wink*
...
Peace, love, and Mariska Hargitay everyone.
(If y'all haven't seen Love Guru, then you suck.)
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
7 Reasons the 21st Century is Making You Miserable
Even more depressing, studies show that about one out of four   people have no one   they can confide in. 
The average number of close friends we say   we have is dropping fast, down dramatically in just the last 20 years. Why? 
#1. We don't have enough annoying strangers in our   lives.
That's not   sarcasm. Annoyance is something you build up a tolerance to, like alcohol or   a bad smell. The more we're able to edit the annoyance out of our lives, the   less we're able to handle it. 
The problem is   we've built an awesome, sprawling web of technology meant purely to let us   avoid annoying people. Do all your Christmas shopping online and avoid the   fat lady ramming her cart into you at Target. Spend $5,000 on a home theater   system so you can see movies on a big screen without a toddler kicking the   back of your seat. Hell, rent the DVD's from Netflix and you don't even have   to spend the 30 seconds with the confused kid working the register at   Blockbuster. 
Get stuck in the   waiting room at the doctor? No way   we're striking up a conversation with the smelly old man in the next seat.   We'll plug the iPod into our ears and have a text conversation with a friend   or play our DS. Filter that annoyance right out of our world. 
Now   that would be awesome if it were actually possible to keep all of the irritating shit out of your   life. But, it's not. It never will be. As long as you have needs, you'll have   to deal with people you can't stand from time to time. We're losing that   skill, the one that lets us deal with strangers and tolerate their shrill voices   and clunky senses of humor and body odor and squeaky shoes. So, what   encounters you do have with the outside world, the world you can't control,   make you want to go on a screaming crotch-punching spree. 
#2. We don't have enough annoying friends, either.
Lots of us were   born into towns full of people we couldn't stand. As a kid, maybe you found   yourself in an elementary school classroom, packed in with two dozen kids you   did not choose and who shared none of your tastes or interests. Maybe you got   beat up a lot. 
But, you've grown   up. And if you're, say, a huge DragonForce fan, you can go find their forum   and meet a dozen people just like you. Or even better, start a private room   with your favorite few and lock everybody else out. Say goodbye to the   tedious, awkward, painful process of dealing with somebody who's truly   different. That's another 
The problem is   that peacefully dealing with incompatible people is crucial to living in a   society. In fact, if you think about it, peacefully dealing with people you   can't stand is   society. Just people with opposite tastes and conflicting personalities   sharing space and cooperating, often through gritted teeth. 
Fifty years ago,   you had to sit in a crowded   room to see a movie. You didn't get to choose; you either did that or you   missed the movie. When you got a new car, everyone on the block came and   stood in your yard to look it over. You can bet that some of those people   were assholes. 
Yet,   on the whole, people back then were apparently happier in their jobs and more   satisfied with their lives. And get this: They had more friends. 
That's right.   Even though they had almost no ability to filter their peers according to   common interests (hell, often you were just friends with the guy who happened   to live next door), they still came up with more close friends than we have   now-people they could trust. 
It turns out,   apparently, that after you get over that first irritation, after you shed   your shell of "they listen to different music because they wouldn't understand mine" superiority,   there's a sort of comfort in needing other people and being needed on a level   beyond common interests. It turns out humans are social animals after all.   And that ability to suffer fools, to tolerate annoyance, that's literally the   one single thing that allows you to function in a world populated by other   people who aren't you. Otherwise, you turn emo. Science has proven it. 
#3. Texting is a shitty way to communicate.
I have this   friend who uses the expression "No, thank   you," in a sarcastic way. It means, "I'd rather be shot   in the face." He puts a little ironic lilt on the last two words that   lets you know. You ask, "Want to go see that new Rob Schneider   movie?" And, he'll say, "No, thank   you." 
So one day we had   this exchange via text: 
Me:   "Hey, do you want me to bring over that leftover chili I made?" 
   
   Him: "No, thank you" 
That pissed me   off. I'm proud of my chili. It takes four days to make it. I grind up the   dried peppers myself; the meat is expensive, hand-tortured veal. And, now my   offer to give him some is dismissed with his bitchy catchphrase? 
I didn't speak to   him for six months. He sent me a letter, I mailed it back, unread, with a   dead rat packed inside. 
It was my wife   who finally ran into him and realized that the "No, thank you" he   replied with was not meant to be sarcastic, but was a literal, "No, but   thank you for offering." He had no room in his freezer, it turns out. 
So did we really   need a study to tell us that more than 40 percent of what you say in   an e-mail is misunderstood? Well, they did one anyway. 
How many of your   friends have you only spoken with online? If 40 percent of your personality   has gotten lost in the text transition, do these people even really know you?   The people who dislike you via text, on message boards or chatrooms or   whatever, is it because you're really incompatible? Or, is it because of the   misunderstood 40 percent? And, what about the ones who like you? 
Many of us try to   make up that difference in sheer numbers, piling up six dozen friends on   MySpace. But here's the problem ... 
#4. Online company only makes us lonelier.
When someone   speaks to you face-to-face, what percentage of the meaning is actually in the   words, as opposed to the body language and tone of voice? Take a guess. 
It's 7 percent. The other 93 percent is   nonverbal, according to studies. No, I don't know how they   arrived at that exact number. They have a machine or something. But we didn't   need it. I mean, come on. Most of our humor is sarcasm, and sarcasm is just   mismatching the words with the tone. Like my friend's "No, thank you." 
You don't wait   for a girl to verbally tell you she likes you. It's the sparkle in her eyes,   her posture, the way she grabs your head and shoves your face into her boobs.   
That's the crux   of the problem. That human ability to absorb the moods of others through that   kind of subconscious osmosis is crucial. Kids born without it are considered   mentally handicapped. People who have lots of it are called   "charismatic" and become movie stars and politicians. It's not what   they say; it's this energy they put off that makes us feel good about   ourselves. 
When we're living   in Text World, all that is stripped away. There's a weird side effect to it,   too: absent a sense of the other person's mood, every line we read gets   filtered through our own mood   instead. The reason I read my friend's chili message as sarcastic was because   I was in an irritable mood. In that state of mind, I was eager to be   offended. 
And   worse, if I do enough of my communicating this way, my mood never changes. After all,   people keep saying nasty things to me! Of course I'm depressed! It's me   against the world! 
No, what I need   is somebody to shake me by the shoulders and snap me out of it. Which leads   us to No. 5 ... 
#5. We don't get criticized enough.
Most of what   sucks about not having close friends isn't the missed birthday parties or the   sad, single-player games of ping pong with the wall. No, what sucks is the   lack of real criticism. 
In my time online   I've been called "fag" approximately 104,165 times. I keep an Excel   spreadsheet. I've also been called "asshole" and   "cockweasel" and "fuckcamel" and "cuntwaffle"   and "shitglutton" and "porksword" and   "wangbasket" and "shitwhistle" and "thundercunt"   and "fartminge" and "shitflannel" and   "knobgoblin" and "boring." 
And none of it   mattered, because none of those people knew me well enough to really hit the   target. I've been insulted lots, but I've been criticized very little. And don't ever confuse the two. An   insult is just someone who hates you making a noise to indicate their hatred.   A barking dog. Criticism is someone trying to help you, by telling you   something about yourself that you were a little too comfortable not knowing. 
Tragically, there   are now a whole lot of people who never   have those conversations. The interventions, the brutal honesty, the,   "you know, everybody's pissed off because of what you said last night,   but nobody wants to say anything because they're afraid of you," sort of   conversations. Those horrible, awkward, wrenchingly uncomfortable sessions   that you can only have with someone who sees right to the center of you. 
E-mail and   texting are awesome tools for avoiding that level of honesty. With text, you   can respond when you feel like it. You can measure your words. You can pick   and choose which questions to answer. The person on the other end can't see   your face, can't see you get nervous, can't detect when you're lying. You   have almost total control and as a result that other person never sees past   your armor, never sees you at your worst, never knows the embarrassing little   things about yourself that you can't control. Gone are the common quirks,   humiliations and vulnerabilities that real friendships are built on. 
Browse around   people's MySpace pages, look at the characters they create for themselves. If   you've built a pool of friends via a blog, building yourself up as a   misunderstood, mysterious Master of the Night, it's kind of hard to log on   and talk about how you went to prom and got diarrhea out on the dance floor.   You never get to really be yourself, and that's a very lonely feeling. 
And, on top of   all that ... 
#6. We're victims of the Outrage Machine.
A whole lot of   the people still reading this are saying, "Of course I'm depressed! People are   starving! 
But how did we   wind up with a more negative view of the world than our parents? Or   grandparents? Back then, people didn't live as long and babies died more   often. Diseases were more common. In those days, if your buddy moved away the   only way to communicate was with pen and paper and a stamp. We have 
We are physically   better off today in every possible way in which such things can be measured   ... but you sure as hell wouldn't know that if you're getting your news   online. Why? 
Well, ask   yourself: If some music site posts an article called, "Fall Out Boy   is a Fine Band" and on the same day posts another one called, "Fall   Out Boy is the Shittiest Fucking Band of the Last 100 Years, Say Experts,"   which do you think will get the most traffic? The second one wins in a   blowout. Outrage manufactures word-of-mouth. 
The news blogs   many of you read? The people running them know the same thing. Every site is   in a dogfight for traffic (even if they don't run ads, they still measure   their success by the size of their audience) and so they carefully pick   through the wires for the most inflammatory story possible. The other blogs   start echoing the same story from the same point of view. If you want, you   can surf all day and never swim out of the warm, stagnant waters of the   "aren't those bastards evil" pool. 
Only in that   climate could those silly 9/11 conspiracy theories come about (saying the   Bush administration and the FDNY blew up the towers, and that the planes were   holograms). To hear these people talk, every opposing politician is Hitler,   and every election is the freaking apocalypse. All because it keeps you   reading. 
This wasn't as   much a problem in the old days, of course. Some of us remember having only   three channels on TV. That's right. Three. We're talking about the '80s here.   So there was something unifying in the way we all sat down to watch the same   news, all of it coming from the same point of view. Even if the point of view   was retarded and wrong, even if some stories went criminally unreported, we   at least all shared it. 
That's over.   There effectively is no "mass media" any more so,   where before we disagreed because we saw the same news and interpreted it   differently, now we disagree because we're seeing completely different   freaking news. When we can't even agree on the basic facts, the differences   become irreconcilable. That constant feeling of being at bitter odds with the   rest of the world brings with it a tension that just builds and builds. 
We humans used to   have lots of natural ways to release that kind of angst. But these days... 
#7. We feel worthless, because we actually are worth less.
There's one   advantage to having mostly online friends, and it's one that nobody ever   talks about: 
They demand less   from you. 
Sure, you   emotionally support them, comfort them after a breakup, maybe even talk them   out of a suicide. But knowing someone in meatspace adds a whole, long list of   annoying demands. Wasting your whole afternoon helping them fix their   computer. Going to funerals with them. Toting them around in your car every   day after theirs gets repossessed by the bank. Having them show up   unannounced when you were just settling in to watch the Dirty Jobs marathon on the Discovery   channel, then mentioning how hungry they are until you finally give them half   your sandwich. 
You have so much   more control in Instant Messenger, or on a forum, or in World of Warcraft. 
The problem is   you are hard-wired by evolution to need to do things for people. Everybody   for the last five thousand years seemed to realize this and then we suddenly   forgot it in the last few decades. We get suicidal teens and scramble to   teach them self-esteem. Well, unfortunately, self-esteem and the ability to   like yourself only come after you've done   something that makes you likable. You can't bullshit yourself. If   I think Todd over here is worthless for sitting in his room all day, drinking   Pabst and playing video games one-handed because he's masturbating with the   other one, what will I think of myself if I do the same thing? 
You want to break   out of that black tar pit of self-hatred? Brush the black hair out of your   eyes, step away from the computer and buy a nice gift for someone you loathe.   Send a card to your worst enemy. Make dinner for your mom and dad. Or just do   something simple, with an tangible result. Go clean the leaves out of the   gutter. Grow a damn plant. 
It ain't rocket   science; you are a social animal and thus you are born with little happiness   hormones that are released into your bloodstream when you see a physical   benefit to your actions. Think about all those teenagers in their dark rooms,   glued to their PC's, turning every life problem into ridiculous melodrama.   Why do they make those cuts on their arms? It's because making the pain-and   subsequent healing-tangible releases endorphins they don't get otherwise.   It's pain, but at least it's real.   
That form of   stress relief via mild discomfort used to be part of our daily lives, via our   routine of hunting gazelles and gathering berries and climbing rocks and   fighting bears. No more. This is why office jobs make so many of us   miserable; we don't get any physical, tangible result from our work. But do   construction out in the hot sun for two months, and for the rest of your life   you can drive past a certain house and say, "Holy shit, I built that." Maybe that's why   mass shootings are more common in offices than construction sites. 
It's the kind of   physical, dirt-under-your-nails satisfaction that you can only get by turning   off the computer, going outdoors and re-connecting with the real world. That   feeling, that "I built that" or "I grew that" or "I   fed that guy" or "I made these pants" feeling, can't be   matched by anything the internet has to offer. 
Except, you know, this website. ----By David Wong
http://www.cracked.com/article_15231_7-reasons-21st-century-making-you-miserable.html
