Saturday, March 14, 2009

Lagging Behind

I think I haven't written in a few days. I'm not sick or anything, just lazy. Or something.

My reading slump seems to be over. I finished Edgar Sawtelle, which I recommend, and also Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen, which I also recommend. On to something new.

I just got a Facebook request from my college roommate, which I approved. Now that's what I'm talking about. That's the kind of person Facebook is supposed to connect you to.

I find that I am, for lack of a better word, astonished by what's going on with the economy. It's as if the entire paradigm -- I hate that word -- of how we live our lives is undergoing a metamorphosis before our eyes. Businesses that have thrived for a hundred years are going to disappear, and I don't mean individual companies, but whole industries, the way there are no blacksmiths on every corner anymore. The monumental amount of greed that our banking industry showed is also astonishing; Madoff isn't the only one out there who pulled off what he did, you know. But in terms of the average everyday us, we are slowly coming to see that we are not entitled to the things we used to think we were. And more. It's hard to put into words.

For years, I used to see commercials on TV every single day for cars, investment, and so on, and I would feel bad because how was I ever going to buy a $30,000 car? What did I have to invest? These commercials, I felt, were directed towards the very small segment of the population that had this kind of money to burn. (I didn't realize that people were buying cars -- and houses -- they couldn't afford by taking out absurd loans.) Now I see this same commercials and I think: Who are they kidding? NO ONE is going to buy that stuff now, so why are they wasting their money on the ads? They need to completely re-think the way they do their business if they want to survive, the businesses that do that are the ones who will. Can you imagine no General Motors? They snoozed, and they lost.

In other news, I don't think acupuncture is doing it for me. I'm considering alternatives. The substitute acupuncturist who worked on me last Saturday worked hard on my neck/shoulder/arm, and I am still not good for that. My upper arm is weak, and mostly hurts. I'm considering therapeutic massage, but not just yet.

If I'm still alert when it gets dark, which should be soon, I think I may treat myself to a Pay-Per-View movie, which I've only done once or twice before, I think, and watch The Secret Lives of Bees. I'll let you know how I make out with that.

Happy
QVC :: ENTRY #2007
READING: Paper Towns by John Green

3 comments:

  1. i been railing for years about greed, and now see what happened?!?

    i hope you feel better soon.

    when i had cable tee vee, i tryed pay-per-view. then, after a few months went by, i called the cable company to find out where my check was. the lady asked, what check? and i said the check for pay-per-view! i told her that i did the pay-per-view and watched about 60 movies, at 10.99 a pop, so, since it was pay-per view, i was expecting a big check for participating! that they was supposed to pay me per viewing the movies!! she said that i got it wrong, i was supposed to pay THEM fer watching the movies, not the other way around!! hahaha!!

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  2. That's what I don't get.. people buying cars that cost more than my first house and borrowing the entire amount. We weren't brought up that way, we were taught to save until we had the majority of the purchase price... the average household credit card debt is $8K.. yet I owe $0... so someone has to have a pretty big debt!

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  3. When Roosevelt came into office in 1933, he supposedly set up safeguards so that such things could not happen. There were watchguard agencies and so forth. Seems to me -- I wasn't paying enough attention, I guess -- that sometime in the 1980's, people or companies complained about the oversight and asked for less supervision. I feel as if we've all been cheated; this wasn't supposed to happen.

    I haven't seen "The Secret Life of Bees," but I did enjoy the book. Took me a long time to read it, though.

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