To be or, or … um … line!

The Association for Psychological Science did an interesting study on how actors remember their lines. Apparently it’s not be memorization but by feeling their characters intention so that the line comes naturally. It has interesting implications to regular people studying …

For example, students who studied material by imagining conveying its meaning to somebody else who needed the information showed higher retention than those who tried to memorize the material by rote.

I wonder if any of this is in the Mind Hacks O’Reilly book. I’ve been curious about it for quite some time but never quite gotten around to having too much of a look …

Had a nice-ish day yesterday starting with breakfast at coffee bean where I finished the book I’ve been reading, “The Cobweb” (Neal Stephenson, J. Frederick George) Along the lines of regular cultural differences, here in SG they dropped the “The” from the title.

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Chez Pim Is Brilliant

She has one of my favorite food blogs, but she is utterly brilliant …

Here I am:
Thailand is such a study in contradiction. There are so many things that are familiar, yet others are now utterly foreign to me. My mother told me today that I held myself like a Farang, a foreigner. I was startled. What do you mean I held myself like a foreigner, I asked her, indignantly. Then I realized how bow-y everyone around me was. Thai people have a habit of rounding up the shoulders and slouching a little, in deference to others with higher social status. Security guards do it when opening doors, waiters do it while bringing food or refilling water, one must do it even while standing in the company of other people of higher status or age. I am almost certain thieves also bow when taking your money. Bangkok is a city full of polite bowing birds. If you were a chiropractor, this city would be a gold mine waiting for you! As for me, my shoulders were squared, and my back straight. I was ready to face anyone on the same level. I am indeed holding myself like a Farang.