on saturday I drove to the mountains with a friend in one of these cars
our meetup group went bushwalking to the 3 sisters
then I came back to sydney for a cyclesydney ride through the greenway. a fantastic night!
That idea you have? Stop putting it off. Will it be difficult? Probably. Will you want to give up? Absolutely. But don’t. You have to persevere.
What about failure? Learn from it. Try again. Be smarter this time. Make new mistakes. There’s a story I heard once: it took Edison more than 1,000 tries to invent the light bulb. He remarked to a reporter that he had not failed, he had simply found 1,000 ways to not create a light bulb.
How about luck? You’ll need it. But don’t let that stop you. You can’t get lucky if you don’t even try.
Get started. Change something. Do something.
Phil Crumm
I’m in love with emily from metric
went bikehashing with my buddy bob on sunday. so much fun! thanks bob. and thanks for taking the pics too, they look great
here is a pic of bob I took with his camera
It’s not that living things die; it’s that multicellular organisms die. But why?
Every single-celled organism alive today has been in existence since life began over 3 billion years ago. This is because individual cells do not give birth, they divide. After cell division, the two cells that result are each as old as the single cell that preceded them. The cell does not become younger by dividing. (Although this may not be exactly true, see: [1])
Thus every cell in your body is over 3 billion years old.
The strategy that multicellular organisms such as humans use to project themselves into the future is to create new cell colonies from a single undifferentiated cell rather than maintaining existing colonies indefinitely. The main reason is that reproduction is more flexible and robust than maintenance, and it provides a way of starting over with a “clean slate” and slightly different genes. Complex organisms accumulate billions of errors and problems over their lifetime. Most of these errors are fixed as fast as they happen, but life takes a toll and not all problems are reversible. Just as reinstalling Microsoft Windows every so often fixes accumulated system issues, so does generating a new organism every so often from a single cell.
my long weekend started our slowly then ended up being really busy
went to bathurst and saw some old friends from my uni days. spent some time with an old friend, michelle. nice to see you!
tonight I went and saw Coniston at the sydney film festival. amazing and moving doco
seems like you can’t embed the youtube link. so click here