Wonders Of The 20th Year

Words and Order. Breathings of the Heart.

Of Care & Concern~ September 20, 2009

Filed under: Literary Works, Random talkings` — Restrained Deliriums @ 11:21 am

From The New York Times, 19 September 2009.

Blue Is The New Black.

Women are getting unhappier, I told my friend Carl.

“How can you tell?” he deadpanned. “It’s always been whine-whine-whine.”

Why are we sadder? I persisted.

“Because you care,” he replied with a mock sneer. “You have feelings.”

Oh, that.

In the early ’70s, breaking out of the domestic cocoon, leaving their mothers’ circumscribed lives behind, young women felt exhilarated and bold.

But the more women have achieved, the more they seem aggrieved. Did the feminist revolution end up benefiting men more than women?

According to the General Social Survey, which has tracked Americans’ mood since 1972, and five other major studies around the world, women are getting gloomier and men are getting happier.

Before the ’70s, there was a gender gap in America in which women felt greater well-being. Now there’s a gender gap in which men feel better about their lives.

As Arianna Huffington points out in a blog post headlined “The Sad, Shocking Truth About How Women Are Feeling”: “It doesn’t matter what their marital status is, how much money they make, whether or not they have children, their ethnic background, or the country they live in. Women around the world are in a funk.”

(The one exception is black women in America, who are a bit happier than they were in 1972, but still not as happy as black men.)

Marcus Buckingham, a former Gallup researcher who has a new book out called “Find Your Strongest Life: What the Happiest and Most Successful Women Do Differently,” says that men and women passed each other midpoint on the graph of life.

“Though women begin their lives more fulfilled than men, as they age, they gradually become less happy,” Buckingham writes in his new blog on The Huffington Post, pointing out that this darker view covers feelings about marriage, money and material goods. “Men, in contrast, get happier as they get older.”

Buckingham and other experts dispute the idea that the variance in happiness is caused by women carrying a bigger burden of work at home, the “second shift.” They say that while women still do more cooking, cleaning and child-caring, the trend lines are moving toward more parity, which should make them less stressed.

When women stepped into male- dominated realms, they put more demands — and stress — on themselves. If they once judged themselves on looks, kids, hubbies, gardens and dinner parties, now they judge themselves on looks, kids, hubbies, gardens, dinner parties — and grad school, work, office deadlines and meshing a two-career marriage.

“Choice is inherently stressful,” Buckingham said in an interview. “And women are being driven to distraction.”

One area of extreme distraction is kids. “Across the happiness data, the one thing in life that will make you less happy is having children,” said Betsey Stevenson, an assistant professor at Wharton who co-wrote a paper called “The Paradox of Declining Female Happiness.” “It’s true whether you’re wealthy or poor, if you have kids late or kids early. Yet I know very few people who would tell me they wish they hadn’t had kids or who would tell me they feel their kids were the destroyer of their happiness.”

The more important things that are crowded into their lives, the less attention women are able to give to each thing.

Add this to the fact that women are hormonally more complicated and biologically more vulnerable. Women are much harder on themselves than men.

They tend to attach to other people more strongly, beat themselves up more when they lose attachments, take things more personally at work and pop far more antidepressants.

“Women have lives that become increasingly empty,” Buckingham said. “They’re doing more and feeling less.”

Another daunting thing: America is more youth and looks obsessed than ever, with an array of expensive cosmetic procedures that allow women to be their own Frankenstein Barbies.

Men can age in an attractive way while women are expected to replicate — and Restylane — their 20s into their 60s.

Buckingham says that greater prosperity has made men happier. And they are also relieved of bearing sole responsibility for their family finances, and no longer have the pressure of having women totally dependent on them.

Men also tend to fare better romantically as time wears on. There are more widows than widowers, and men have an easier time getting younger mates.

Stevenson looks on the bright side of the dark trend, suggesting that happiness is beside the point. We’re happy to have our newfound abundance of choices, she said, even if those choices end up making us unhappier.

A paradox, indeed.

——

Gender studies. Haha.

I remembered a few days ago, I was quite fret up with work and other issues. Then I ranted a little to a close guy friend of mine whom commented “Don’t mind me asking this, why do you care so much?”

I paused for a while and in my mind I thought “Yeah that’s true. Why?”

Because I bother? Because things just spring out of my mind on random occasions? Because I can’t help caring?

Sometimes I really wish to be able to Care Less. Why bother so much when certain things ain’t within your control? Or when issues ain’t of yours to bother with? Why remember so many nitty-gritty details on top of all the clutter of information that my mind has to process everyday?

I finally came to realize one thing (has its good and bad points):

I try too hard to satisfy everybody.

Maybe it is an innate behaviour. I just don’t want to disappoint anyone (because I know how it feels).

However from this hectic week, I guess I learnt something important: Don’t Care, or at least, don’t care, So Much.

:)

 

Brain-twitching~ August 27, 2009

Filed under: Literary Works — Restrained Deliriums @ 12:39 pm

~An Emperor’s responsibility: Giving life to people and killing people, those are the powers that the Emperor has.

~Sometimes people have to be persuaded into morality by the example of an execution (capital punishment).

~For every profit there is a loss.

~There are too many men who claim to be pure scholars and yet are stupid and arrogant; we’d be better off with less talk of moral principle and more practice of it.

~Just because someone shows them something supposed to be ore from a mine (instead of gold) and talks glibly, there are many people about who, being somewhat rash by nature, are ready to risk everything and, finally being talked into it, and by losing what little they had.

~In books on military strategy, it is said that only he who knows the enemy as well as his own side can be called a great general. Any merchant who tries to trick a samurai does not know his enemy.

Excerpts from the book that I’m reading now, Global History. All these extractions are under A World in Transition. I hope some of the excerpts made you re-read them and ponder for awhile ;) Personally, I find the 4th one very meaningful. Like I mentioned before, Talk is cheap, Action is eloquence (^.^) What’s the point of being so well-read, memorizing scripts and lines but fail to understand the essence of it?

 

Think. Part I~ June 29, 2009

Filed under: Literary Works, My everyday living` — Restrained Deliriums @ 2:53 pm

Is sustainable luxury an oxymoron? Luxury’s heavy undertones of excess and decadence is closely linked with the fads and whimsies of fashion, making it an unlikely associate to the idea of sustainability.

L’Officiel, Singapore May 2009

This is the 1st of the 3 (or more) interesting passages that I would like to share :) It could be difficult for you guys to fully interpret the text because of the missing front and back parts. But I still insist on sharing good reads ;)

For sustainable luxury (1st one), many of us who fall in the middle-income group probably can only afford to own a few, carefully selected, luxury items. Who cares if we’re spotted holding last season’s Chanel 2.55 bag? However, for the up-status and affluent, luxury will never be sustainable? I doubt most of them ever wondered how much resources they are wasting (so long as I can afford it, it doesn’t matter). Or maybe, we should thank them for their seasonal support because without their monthly obsessive purchases, will the designer market survive? And will the works of designers ever be noticed, and appreciated?

 

Chew the cud II September 15, 2008

Filed under: Literary Works — Restrained Deliriums @ 7:45 pm

I thought it’ll be nice to share with you guys 2 intriguing quotes:

It is one of the great paradoxes of economics that the more someone has paid for something, the happier he or she will tend to feel about the product.

- Dominic Lawson

And when we are tempted to draw a line in the sand dividing the world into freedom-loving and diabolical monsters, we should remember to look at the plank (or bomb or secret poison) in our own eye and recall that many of the terrorists we fear and hate were begotten by anti-terrorist policies that undermine our democratic freedoms.

- Patrick McCormick

The above two displayed contradictions that are part of life’s puzzles :)

Some food for thought!

P.S. Click here for more chewings.

 

Reflections September 5, 2008

Filed under: Literary Works — Restrained Deliriums @ 12:18 pm

以铜为镜,可以正衣冠

以古为镜,可以见兴替

以人为镜,可以知得失

This is like so meaningful =) It is simple, right to the point, yet leaving you with some hidden meanings. I love the poem structure as well! Every line starts with 以 and has 镜 then goes on with 可以 :)

So every sentence is like:

‘Using … as a mirror, so to reflect through it to know whether what you did (in particular to the sentence topic) was appropriate’

Ok I’ve no proper training in literature so I guess I shouldn’t even try analysing it for it’ll all be just folderol. I just want to share this poem, that’s it! I hope you guys get the nuances of this beautiful piece of writing by 唐太宗! :)

 

[Read][读][読みます] July 1, 2008

Filed under: Literary Works, Random talkings` — Restrained Deliriums @ 8:42 pm

I am trying my best to improve on my language skills, be it English, Mandarin or Japanese, I hope to master them well enough to be able to do translation between these 3 languages :D

I find it really essential to have good language skills as:

1) It shows your educational level, hence your level of refinement. (Fine, I’m doing a generalisation here.)

2) It affects your thinking, yes I am pro-Wittgenstein, I believe too, that language is essentially the expression of thought and you need words, many many words to describe that ‘picture in your mind’ accurately.

3) I think it is sexy for someone to have polished language abilities, it is not necessary to always use bombastic vocabularies, but isn’t it a turn off to have only limited words in your brains? I feel it is even better if she/he is multilingual, for learning a language exposes you to the respective culture, thus you know more about the world around you, making you more receptive to new ideas/thinking, and so, giving you an edge above the rest. 

For me, I am embarrassed to say that at the age of 20 this year, I still find myself at times being unable to phrase my words correctly when expressing my thoughts, and even have basic grammatical or spelling errors. I try to read my writings again and again to spot on the mistakes (whether it is due to carelessness or not) and make sure I don’t repeat it.

I used to be an avid reader until secondary school, when workload got heavier and the pressure to do well to enter JC got me less time to flip through classic English books such as Journey to the Centre of the Earth, Great Expectations, Robinson Crusoe, Jane Eyre, Pride & Prejudice, Treasure Island etc which I once favored greatly when I was young.

As I’ve mention before, exercising is essential for the body just as reading is for the mind. I hope to get back my avidness for reading. Its sure helps to have a good book to read during your free days and it is a good way to improve your language skills too right?

The next book that I’m looking out for is this:

Ok I shall end here.

Good Night!

 

Perusal~ June 22, 2008

Filed under: Literary Works, Try it out!` — Restrained Deliriums @ 7:30 pm

Exercise is beneficial for the body just as books are to the mind :)

I came back from AMK LIbrary with 2 great books.

This has contents such as Knowledge and the Use of Language, Wittgenstein’s Philosophy of Language, Analytic and Synthetic sentences, Predicate logic etc. Language is beyond merely just reading plainly off the pages, there are hidden meanings and twitching of sentence structure or even just a simple word can give the passage/sentence a whole new meaning :) Besides, learning more on this field gives us an opportunity to think in depth and it improves our analytical skills. I think it is really important for us to think beyond what we always see and hear (but not over frequently if not we’ll be insane!), to give our own judgement and not get swayed by what the majority says. You live your life, there is no meaning to always be in someone else’s shadows! ;)

The second book, is just for me to know more about Turkey’s West Coast which is situated near Greece & (somewhat near)Italy.

Hence the book covers areas that are Greek and Roman in culture like the scenic Greek Island of Rhodes, Didyma with its stupendous Temple of Apollo etc.

Will do up a book review once I finish reading.

Cheers!

 

 

Poetry for the Soul May 14, 2008

Filed under: Literary Works — Restrained Deliriums @ 10:22 am
This Poem represents every thinking bit in my mind now…
A Dream Within A Dream by Edgar Allan Poe

Take this kiss upon the brow!
And, in parting from you now,
Thus much let me avow–
You are not wrong, who deem
That my days have been a dream;
Yet if hope has flown away
In a night, or in a day,
In a vision, or in none,
Is it therefore the less gone?
All that we see or seem
Is but a dream within a dream.
I stand amid the roar
Of a surf-tormented shore,
And I hold within my hand
Grains of the golden sand–
How few! yet how they creep
Through my fingers to the deep,
While I weep–while I weep!
O God! can I not grasp
Them with a tighter clasp?
O God! can I not save
One from the pitiless wave?
Is all that we see or seem
But a dream within a dream?

 

~Our daily lives are just an illusion, the reality holds emptiness, for its only surrealism that stands in our fuddle minds~