
Redland Public Library.
Jan 2018.
“If you do not value libraries then you do not value information or culture or wisdom. You are silencing the voices of the past and you are damaging the future”
– Neil Gaiman

“If you do not value libraries then you do not value information or culture or wisdom. You are silencing the voices of the past and you are damaging the future”
– Neil Gaiman
“I studied the classical effects from classical films. I don’t know only the new techniques, I know the old techniques. When you were talking about compositing an image, the language is still the same – matte lines, roto, matte paintings. You’re using the same language as before. Grain, haze, atmospheric dispersion, specularity – the language is the same.”
“If you’re unfamiliar or uncomfortable with how art and science can mingle to produce something clinically beneficial, it’s a study premise that might seem far-fetched — but it didn’t seem that way to Gurwin, an ophthalmology resident at Penn, in part because she’d already seen the benefits of art education on a medical career firsthand.
“Having studied fine arts myself and having witnessed its impact on my medical training, I knew art observation training would be a beneficial practice in medical school,” she said. “Observing and describing are skills that are taught very well in fine arts training, and so it seemed promising to utilize their teachings and apply it to medicine.”
“Gurwin and Binenbaum’s findings, published in the journal Ophthalmology in September: The medical students who’ve dabbled in art just do better.
“It’s a glimpse at how non-clinical training can and does make for a better-prepared medical professional. Not only does art observation training improve med students’ abilities to recognize visual cues, it also improves their ability to describe those cues.”
“Isaacson argues that Leonardo’s observational powers were not innate and that with sufficient practice, we can all observe as he did. People talk in a precious way about genius, creativity, and curiosity as superpowers that people are born with but noticing is a more humble pursuit. Noticing is something we can all do.”
also via
Our dreams are, generally, us imagining ourselves from the outside, not the inside. This can never be experienced and, because of that, “following one’s dreams” is usually a necessarily fruitless activity. Even in the best of circumstances, it is not a source of well-being or comfort.
And although we’re often told, “You can do anything you set your mind to!”, it’s just not true. People CAN’T do anything they set their minds to. The physicality of my vocal chords make it so that I will never sing like Adele. My height precludes me from being a basketball star. My age and ethnicity prevent me from ever being a member of South Korean boy band BTS, no matter how much I set my mind to it.
If you discover what you’re truly good at, and what you enjoy doing, and it’s something you can potentially make a living at – well, that, to me, is a much richer life than following your dreams, which are not only unfullfilling, but they shift and change throughout your life anyway. Because to achieve a dream is one thing, but to live inside a dream that you discover moment by moment along your path, where you grow stronger and wiser, and enhance the lives of those around you – well, that’s a much deeper, more fulfilling life.
This is a list of things/songs/tweets I have found/been shown recently, that haven’t fallen into specific blog posts. I suppose if I ever had a newsletter it would probably be something like this. I was doing this regularly and then stopped so this is just since the start of the year.
There’s more after the jump…

Nature’s particular gift to the walker, through the semi-mechanical act of walking — a gift no other form of exercise seems to transmit in the same high degree — is to set the mind jogging, to make it garrulous, exalted, a little mad maybe — certainly creative and suprasensitive, until at last it really seems to be outside of you and as if it were talking to you whilst you are talking back to it. Then everything gradually seems to join in, sun and the wind, the white road and the dusty hedges, the spirit of the season, whichever that may be, the friendly old earth that is pushing life firth of every sort under your feet or spell-bound in a death-like winter trance, till you walk in the midst of a blessed company, immersed in a dream-talk far transcending any possible human conversation. Time enough, later, for that…; here and now, the mind has shaken off its harness, is snorting and kicking up heels like a colt in a meadow.–
These are the films I remember watching/rewatching in 2017.
The Shape of Water (2017)
Mirror (1975)
King Kong (1933)
Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017)
Logan (2017)
Thor: Ragnarok (2017)
Spider-man: Homecoming (2017)
Hidden Figures (2016)
Moonlight (2016)
La La Land (2016)
Singing in the Rain (1952)
Legion season 1 (2017)
Guardians of the Galaxy Volume 2 (2017)
Blade Runner (1982)
Blade Runner 2049 (2017)
Dark River (2017)
Inside Out (2015)
War for the Planet of the Apes (2017)
Putney Swope (1969)
The Kingdom of Dreams and Madness (2013)
Jessica Jones Season 1 (2015)
Little Women (2017)
Clash of the Titans (2010)
Titanic (1956)
Man of Steel (2013)
Wonder Woman (2017)
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016)
Finest Hour (2016)
Dunkirk (2017)
Iron Fist season 1 (2017)
Batman Begins (2005)
The Dark Knight (2008)
The Dark Knight Rises (2012)
Taboo season 1 (2017)
Nocturnal Animals (2016)
See also what I read and listened to in 2017.
Here are some of the highlights of the music I listened to the most in 2017.
There’s a full playlist of the tracks I listen to the most here, and a playlist of all the songs I was recommended/found/started listening to in 2017 here.
As always I keep a rolling playlist of stuff I’m listening to at the moment update nearly daily here.
Melatonin by A Tribe Called Quest
To Be A Young Man by Nadine Shah
I Give You Power by Arcade Fire and Mavis Staples
The Heart Part 4 by Kendrick Lamar
How Long by The Pointer Sisters
Open Eye Signal by Jon Hopkins