DO0D

Music and writing

 Writing  Comments Off on Music and writing
Jul 082011
 

It’s a strange thing, but I need to have music playing while I write.  Right now it’s Mozart’s Clarinet Concerto.  In fact I have always needed music to work well at writing or anything else.  (When in a shared workspace I use headphones.)  If there’s no music I am easily distracted and completely lose my focus.  It’s as if the music occupies the parts of my mind that would otherwise be distracting me from work.

Why should one distraction defeat another?  I wonder if anyone has ever done scientific research on that?

 Posted by at 15:57

Writing tools

 Writing  Comments Off on Writing tools
Jul 082011
 

At one time ‘writing tools’ meant pen and paper.  Then, for a while, it meant a typewriter.  But now it means computer software.  The problem for me is that I like tinkering with software.  With a really good piece of writer’s software I get immersed in setting it up, playing with its features, thinking what could be done to improve the tool, and so on.

In short, it distracts me from getting any writing done.  A typewriter isn’t complicated enough to do that.

 Posted by at 12:05

My adversary: MS-Word

 Fractals  Comments Off on My adversary: MS-Word
Jun 022011
 

I’ve just had a minor triumph: I’ve persuaded MS-Word to do what I want it to do.

For weeks I struggled with the layout of pages with pictures on.   I need a lot of pictures in my book Of Infinite Beauty, so this was a big aggravation.  I would place a picture at the right point in my text and then:

  • It would have a big, unwanted, white margin around it, OR
  • The picture would make a previous picture disappear, OR
  • The picture would go where I put it, but the text would move, OR
  • all sorts of other arbitrary moves would mess up my beautiful page.

I tried varying all the positioning and text wrapping settings.  I was systematic, but I couldn’t find the right combination and I couldn’t get a feel for what was going on: the program was simply unpredictable.  I came to view MS-Word as an adversary, not as a tool.

Now I have a solution.  I organise the space on each picture page by putting in a simple table, usually just two rows and one column, with the row height fixed to fill the page.  (I set the borders of the table to be invisible.)  Then I position the pictures as free-floating items ‘in-front-of-text’.

It seems to work, but I’ve no idea why.

 Posted by at 09:50

Mortality

 Mortality  Quakers  Comments Off on Mortality
Apr 092011
 

Mortal am I, the creature of a day – and yet
I trace the secret pathways of the stars,
No longer tread the earth, but there with Zeus
Break bread and share the food
Of everlasting life.

Claudius Ptolemy, writing in about AD150.

 Posted by at 01:00

Chondritics?

 Chondritics, Words  Comments Off on Chondritics?
Apr 072011
 

“Chondritics” is a word from astrophysics.  Meteorites – rocks which fall to earth from outer space – come in several types.  One type are called “chondrites”.  The chondritic meteorites are made of grainy stone.  Other meteorites are metallic (made mostly of iron and nickel) or achondritic (stony, but with a smooth texture, not grainy).

When meteorites fall to earth most are found to be chondrites (more than 80%).  Astronomers are interested in them because they are clumps of material left over from the early history of the Sun.  The planets formed from a big cloud of gas and grains.  Some grains were icy snowflakes, some were tiny chunks of rock, others were slivers of metal.  Most of this cloud condensed, just over 4,500 million years ago, into the planets we see today.  The bits that didn’t get swept up into planets became asteroids, comets and meteorites.

So when you look at a chondritic meteorite you’re looking at something that’s not as old as the hills, it’s even older!  No wonder astronomers get excited about them.

The word has two interesting links: hypochondria and chondritis.  Chondritis is a medical condition in which some of the cartilage in your body is inflamed.  It is a painful condition.  Hypochondria is an illness in which people have great anxiety about being ill.

The connection comes from the Greek word chondros meaning a grain (as in grains of sugar).   But the Greeks also used chondros to mean gristle, or cartilage.  If your gristle is hurting you may have chondritis.

In my body, and yours, there is a lot of gristle at the lower end of your breast-bone,  It links my ribs together in a semi-rigid way, tough enough to protect my lungs, but flexible enough to let me breathe.  So the part of the body just under your ribs is called the “hypochondria”, the “bit under the gristle”.  When you feel very anxious it can sometimes feel as though there is a big, swollen space under your ribs.  Worrying too much about possible diseases can give you a pain under your gristle: you become a hypochondriac.

 Posted by at 22:39