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Swaggin916
11-19-2013, 09:20 PM
It has been proven by Neuroscientists that the brain does not stop maturing in some people until as late as the mid-20's and I fall right into that category. I know some of the experiences that I've had lately, and books that I have read have had an impact, but it's like a whole new world has opened up. I just understand things now... things that I either never cared to, or was incapable of before. All those years spent in front of the TV playing video games/watching movies, I never had to develop coping skills for the world. For the longest time I never took responsibility for stuff, and didn't understand how disrespectful I was of other's space at times. Both of my parents loved me so much that they just couldn't really put their foot down on a lot of things... and both got off on being my protector I feel. Even though I still live with my friends, for the first time I finally feel like I am on my own... although I guess to a degree it's still a support system because I am not having to challenge myself, make new friends, and experience different things.

Also, before, I was easy to set off/throw off balance... being an only child likely effected that. I had nobody else invading my space and testing me. I was free to let my mind wander wherever and not be disturbed... If someone broke my concentration I couldn't stand it and I'd get annoyed/pissed. If someone told me I was doing something wrong I would get pissed because I felt like they were messing with my free will. Instead of trying to understand where the person was coming from, all I could do was focus on my own internal reactions. Now... It's just becoming so obvious. I am becoming more focused on why they are doing what they are doing rather than how I feel about it, and it's changing my life. With that being said, one can't just let everything fly regardless if you understand where another person is coming from... have to respect your own personal space.

I am still not totally at peace with myself internally, and old unconscious behaviors do still show their face at times (especially when I'm tired), but the speed at which I am able to check myself is getting faster and faster, and other unconscious behaviors that I want are working their way in. The unconscious mind is basically a super computer, and the conscious mind (you), are the programmer. It takes time, but one really can program themselves to react however they'd like.

Anyway, I am just really excited about it so I figured I'd share. Life isn't as care free as it was, but as long as one continues to raise their consciousness, it can continue to be extremely fascinating. Anybody else experiencing/experienced such constant transcendence? Based on what I have read it's pretty standard for younger people. Older folks tend to see things that solidify the way they already see things.

CavaliersFTW
11-19-2013, 09:52 PM
I started having revelations and owning up to responsibility that I otherwise used to feel wasn't 'my' problem/fault, or worse yet, bad habits I was entirely oblivious too starting in my early 20's and the process is still continuing and I hope it doesn't stop because I feel I've still got a long long way to go as far as maturing is concerned if that is the right term for it. I'm much more aware of how others perceive my actions now than I used to be, but like I said, I hope the process continues. In your 20's, you start to realize how tough life is and that we're all lucky just to be here, or at least that's how I feel.

highwhey
11-19-2013, 10:03 PM
Definitely, especially when I'm in the toilet or shower - no joke. I revisit past events in my life, and I begin to see how I have tremendously mishandled many things. I've gone more downhill than up so my current position also helps me value the opportunities I have passed up or simply thrown out the window.

For example, 2 years ago my sister assisted in getting me a job with the same company she works for. She put her reputation on the line for me without question. A month alter I quit without any prior notice or 2 week notice. Fastforward to know, I have decided to get a career in that field again...if I had given that job an honest chance I would be further into accomplishing my goals instead of starting from the bottom - I am literally starting at the bottom with that company, lower than my previous position :facepalm

reppy
11-19-2013, 10:31 PM
Good post, OP. I actually was thinking of making a post exactly like this to get some feedback from people around my age (I'm 28).

I don't know if there's some sort of physical change that happens in your body at this age, or it's a culmination of a new social circle and whatever materials I've read over the past couple years.. But wow, the things I appreciate in life now are a far cry from the past.

I see beauty and serenity in things where I never did before. Recently, I went to the beach. Pacific Northwest beaches aren't exactly warm. They're pretty cold and usually windy. But when driving out there, I noticed how much my mindset had changed. Where I once may have seen a drab looking house with chipping paint, I now see a well-loved home that has been weathered by time and the salt water in the air. I look at it and I think, "There's a house with character. That's a place I'd like to be with the love of my life when we've both grown old."

I've started to realize how important things are to the people around me. Especially children. You can create a memory that will last forever in a child's mind... and most of the time, all you have to do is be there with them in the right way. Just be patient.

I don't really get jealous of people's material possessions. I get jealous when I see people around my age that already have a family. 2 years ago? Doubt I would have cared all that much.

Being a man in modern times is difficult. There is no "now you're a man moment!" You don't go off into the woods to get your first kill and come back a man anymore. So what exactly is a man? I don't know for sure. But I feel like the person I am today is more of a man than the person I was even a year ago.

I suppose I am learning to live in the moment more.

I am not sure if this is what you meant. But it's sort of what my post was going to be about.. and it seemed to fit well enough here.

sundizz
11-20-2013, 02:21 AM
Good post, OP. I actually was thinking of making a post exactly like this to get some feedback from people around my age (I'm 28).

I don't know if there's some sort of physical change that happens in your body at this age, or it's a culmination of a new social circle and whatever materials I've read over the past couple years.. But wow, the things I appreciate in life now are a far cry from the past.

I see beauty and serenity in things where I never did before. Recently, I went to the beach. Pacific Northwest beaches aren't exactly warm. They're pretty cold and usually windy. But when driving out there, I noticed how much my mindset had changed. Where I once may have seen a drab looking house with chipping paint, I now see a well-loved home that has been weathered by time and the salt water in the air. I look at it and I think, "There's a house with character. That's a place I'd like to be with the love of my life when we've both grown old."

I've started to realize how important things are to the people around me. Especially children. You can create a memory that will last forever in a child's mind... and most of the time, all you have to do is be there with them in the right way. Just be patient.

I don't really get jealous of people's material possessions. I get jealous when I see people around my age that already have a family. 2 years ago? Doubt I would have cared all that much.

Being a man in modern times is difficult. There is no "now you're a man moment!" You don't go off into the woods to get your first kill and come back a man anymore. So what exactly is a man? I don't know for sure. But I feel like the person I am today is more of a man than the person I was even a year ago.

I suppose I am learning to live in the moment more.

I am not sure if this is what you meant. But it's sort of what my post was going to be about.. and it seemed to fit well enough here.

Well said. I just turned 28 last month and I felt that I've finally hit the "I'm a man" moment. I draw my strength internally and realize that there is no one that I should rely on beside myself. It doesn't mean that I've grown cold, etc just that I realize the meaning of relationships that I have. I've gotten past the work/life/etc is tiring/sucks and am happy to wake up each day and push myself to accomplish intrinsically motivated goals.

I actually felt happy/depressed up until I was about 25. I didn't know how not to care. I always wanted more, and compared what I had with others. The past 3 years have been the most successful of my life. I am on pace to graduate my master's with a 3.97, begin my startup company, and have a job lined up after graduation in case the startup doesn't take off. None of these thoughts feel overwhelming to me, and I get better everyday at doing the little things that result in creating a different life.

gigantes
11-20-2013, 02:24 AM
@swaggin,
not sure which neuroscience studies you have in mind, but i do consistently hear a loose '25 years old' as the physical maturation point for the human body from amongst the medical community. so i wouldn't be surprised if the brain roughly followed the body in that case.

my personal opinion is that apart from physical brain maturation, overall brain development is a choice, and the choice involves lots of work. in this case, there is no particular age cutoff. as long as you're willing to do the hard work, you can keep rewiring yourself.

i mean, on one hand i see people who develop relatively little past their teens... mainly just learning some skills and some new words across the rest of their lives... their character, habits, philosophies pretty much always the same. they're happy with their life preservers and are hanging on for the long run.

OTOH i see older people who are still growing and changing in fits and starts... here and there, up and down... presumably until the day they die. they are brave enough to entertain new religions / systems of thought, read self help books, meditate, get out of their comfort zones, and face reality more directly. and the results can be very impressive.

...

btw, did you read any of those research studies on consciousness mapping that shklvr posted to your thread a month ago? they're so nerdy and dense that it would help me if someone else here got in to them a little bit, so as to compare notes.


oh, yea... only child here, too. i missed a hell of a lot. oh well. :cheers:

Dresta
11-20-2013, 04:48 AM
@swaggin,
not sure which neuroscience studies you have in mind, but i do consistently hear a loose '25 years old' as the physical maturation point for the human body from amongst the medical community. so i wouldn't be surprised if the brain roughly followed the body in that case.

my personal opinion is that apart from physical brain maturation, overall brain development is a choice, and the choice involves lots of work. in this case, there is no particular age cutoff. as long as you're willing to do the hard work, you can keep rewiring yourself.

i mean, on one hand i see people who develop relatively little past their teens... mainly just learning some skills and some new words across the rest of their lives... their character, habits, philosophies pretty much always the same. they're happy with their life preservers and are hanging on for the long run.

OTOH i see older people who are still growing and changing in fits and starts... here and there, up and down... presumably until the day they die. they are brave enough to entertain new religions / systems of thought, read self help books, meditate, get out of their comfort zones, and face reality more directly. and the results can be very impressive.

...

btw, did you read any of those research studies on consciousness mapping that shklvr posted to your thread a month ago? they're so nerdy and dense that it would help me if someone else here got in to them a little bit, so as to compare notes.


oh, yea... only child here, too. i missed a hell of a lot. oh well. :cheers:

This is exactly right. Brain plasticity - although it diminishes with age - never completely dissipates; it just gets harder to change the older you get. This is because, over time, neural connections are reinforced and get stronger, meaning they are harder to break. And to radically change your thinking, neural connections have to be broken and others have to be made. Hence why the older people get, the harder it is for them to change, the more 'stuck in their ways' they are etc.

I haven't seen it summed up better than this:

'People over forty can seldom be permanently convinced of anything. At eighteen our convictions are hills from which we look; at forty-five they are caves in which we hide.' (Fitzgerald)


@OP - Congrats, i had a similar dramatic change at the end of my teenage years, accompanied by a general feeling of contrition at the masses of free-time wasted in my teens (when you actually had as much as you could want). Then i went to university and became disillusioned by just how poor higher education really was, and how mediocre 90% of those who teach at that level are. As Oscar Wilde said (may be paraphrase): 'In England, those who can't learn, teach.'

What sort of books have you been reading may i ask?

LA_Showtime
11-20-2013, 01:48 PM
It's called growing up. You meet people and go through experiences that fundamentally change you. You realize how difficult life is and how lucky you are to have what you have. Who you surround yourself with, as well as your family and friends, help to define your values and what type of person you want to be, as well as where you want to go in the future. I don't know, you just change. A lot of my college friends say they hate growing up and having more responsibilities, but honestly, I love it.

STATUTORY
11-20-2013, 01:54 PM
aren't you the dude that was in love with his best friend's girl?

what ever came of that? i didn't follow the thread to its conclusion but was interested

-p.tiddy-
11-20-2013, 02:30 PM
Good post, OP. I actually was thinking of making a post exactly like this to get some feedback from people around my age (I'm 28).

I don't know if there's some sort of physical change that happens in your body at this age, or it's a culmination of a new social circle and whatever materials I've read over the past couple years.. But wow, the things I appreciate in life now are a far cry from the past.

I see beauty and serenity in things where I never did before. Recently, I went to the beach. Pacific Northwest beaches aren't exactly warm. They're pretty cold and usually windy. But when driving out there, I noticed how much my mindset had changed. Where I once may have seen a drab looking house with chipping paint, I now see a well-loved home that has been weathered by time and the salt water in the air. I look at it and I think, "There's a house with character. That's a place I'd like to be with the love of my life when we've both grown old."

I've started to realize how important things are to the people around me. Especially children. You can create a memory that will last forever in a child's mind... and most of the time, all you have to do is be there with them in the right way. Just be patient.

I don't really get jealous of people's material possessions. I get jealous when I see people around my age that already have a family. 2 years ago? Doubt I would have cared all that much.

Being a man in modern times is difficult. There is no "now you're a man moment!" You don't go off into the woods to get your first kill and come back a man anymore. So what exactly is a man? I don't know for sure. But I feel like the person I am today is more of a man than the person I was even a year ago.

I suppose I am learning to live in the moment more.

I am not sure if this is what you meant. But it's sort of what my post was going to be about.. and it seemed to fit well enough here.
IMO a "man" today is someone that doesn't have to rely on anyone but himself...and *if* that man has a wife and kids he is capable of providing and caring for them as well.

I'm in my mid 30s and I still have friends that rely on their parents to get by...they still haven't "grown up"...they still don't have the simple tools needed to just pay bills every day on their own...still act like they are college kids who just want to have fun...and it's sad.

I think that is growing problem in society today..."adult-children"

STATUTORY
11-20-2013, 02:51 PM
IMO a "man" today is someone that doesn't have to rely on anyone but himself...and *if* that man has a wife and kids he is capable of providing and caring for them as well.

I'm in my mid 30s and I still have friends that rely on their parents to get by...they still haven't "grown up"...they still don't have the simple tools needed to just pay bills every day on their own...still act like they are college kids who just want to have fun...and it's sad.

I think that is growing problem in society today..."adult-children"

there's higher population density now and less opportunity abound, for a long time americans lived in according to the "norm" where you reached 18 and moved out when in actuality that's the exception in the vast majority of the world. financial independence is going to be harder and harder to attain as time goes on, american exceptionalism is becoming increasingly fleeting.

Theoo
11-20-2013, 03:31 PM
tldr

TheReturn
11-20-2013, 04:35 PM
Unlike you guys I'm not quite there yet. I'm 22 years old, and I'm still at the stage where I'm really uncertain about a lot of things in my life. What's important to me, where I want to be in 10 years.. I honestly don't know. Right now I'm studying Business at the university but I'm having a difficult time motivating myself sometimes because I don't know what I'm doing it for.

tmacattack33
11-20-2013, 04:47 PM
tldr

This is the first post of yours with no grammatical errors. Congrats.

CeltsGarlic
11-20-2013, 04:53 PM
Unlike you guys I'm not quite there yet. I'm 22 years old, and I'm still at the stage where I'm really uncertain about a lot of things in my life. What's important to me, where I want to be in 10 years.. I honestly don't know. Right now I'm studying Business at the university but I'm having a difficult time motivating myself sometimes because I don't know what I'm doing it for.

Im 21 and the situation is exactly the same. Even studies.
Im thinking its because Im really immature for my age. Like really immature. I always find fascinating when other guys are studying for exams for like 10+ hours.. and when you think about Im the stupid one for not doing it. Its way more useful than whatever Im doing then.

UtahJazzFan88
11-20-2013, 05:53 PM
Over the past 4 months I've started to realize some of the aspects of my life that I screwed up in high school & that my life is controlled by ME and nobody else out there is going to make me do shit or motivate myself besides ME. I think a lot of that has to do with the fact that my mom basically ditched out on my life at 12, and the fact that my brother and I have really never been that close due to age differences. I never had somebody to rely on for the most part.

I was a Straight A student in high school but had no motivation to do anything but go to school, get good grades, then go home and play video games all day and night. I didn't care about girls or making friends then. Right now I am working on the social aspects of my life & looking to move out on my own, and then I will start college in August.

I guess there is a time and day where you wake up and smell the coffee to change your life up. I am sure I have a lot of maturing and growing up to do still obviously.

-p.tiddy-
11-20-2013, 06:11 PM
Over the past 4 months I've started to realize some of the aspects of my life that I screwed up in high school & that my life is controlled by ME and nobody else out there is going to make me do shit or motivate myself besides ME.

I was a Straight A student in high school but had no motivation to do anything but go to school, get good grades, then go home and play video games all day and night. I didn't care about girls or making friends then. Right now I am working on the social aspects of my life & looking to move out on my own, and then I will start college finally.

I guess there is a time and day where you wake up and smell the coffee to change your life up. I am sure I have a lot of maturing and growing up to do still obviously.
if you're lucky

I think a lot of go their entire lives without changing much...a lot of grown men out there with childish mind sets, and a lot of women that spend their entire lives just living off their husbands and never ever knowing how to function on their own.


Everyone, at some point in life, should live alone for at least 2-3 years...pay their own bills, feed themselves, wake up to their own alarm clocks, do their own laundry, etc etc etc...once you have done that and come to the realization you don't need anyone but yourself, it is mental freedom.

TheReturn
11-20-2013, 06:13 PM
Im 21 and the situation is exactly the same. Even studies.
Im thinking its because Im really immature for my age. Like really immature. I always find fascinating when other guys are studying for exams for like 10+ hours.. and when you think about Im the stupid one for not doing it. Its way more useful than whatever Im doing then.
Yeah, I honestly believe it helps to have goals though. If you know what you're working for it's easier to just do it. Right now I feel I've been pretty 'smart' most of my life, but I'm not really learning as much as some people around me because they study much harder. In the past my common sense/knowledge would be sufficient to argue with those people, but I feel like if I don't start studying like they do, they'll surpass me.

The thing is, I want to be great. I hate being mediocre or being beating in any way, shape or form. I just don't know what being great is (to me) honestly. My good friend is becoming an accountant, and he's doing really awesome. I don't think I want to spend my life crunching numbers though.

To me basketball is one of the few things that's simple. If I practice hard, I play better. I want to dominate in games so I practice hard consistently. Other aspects in my life aren't so straightforward.

Sorry if I'm hijacking your positive thread OP. :cheers:

I'm sure you older guys have went through phases of being confused/uncertain though, right?

reppy
11-21-2013, 03:01 AM
I'm sure you older guys have went through phases of being confused/uncertain though, right?

I'm still there. I think most people still do.

What surprises me though is people that never seem to improve or learn anything. They do the same things, make the same mistakes, etc. and it never even occurs to them, "Hey, I should try to do things differently to improve my personal/financial/emotional situation."

Sometimes, in work, I get frustrated because I feel like I'm not learning enough. I'm still doing things the same way. So I usually start looking into new technology or whatever in my free time. Gets me excited again, and even if I don't adopt it, I learn things I can apply to what I'm currently doing.

But at the same time, life has a way of overwhelming you. I give my boss props because that dude is juggling so much at once. I don't even care about occasionally working 60 hours in a week because I feel like a wuss compared to all the time he's putting in.

gigantes
11-21-2013, 03:11 AM
tldr

This is the first post of yours with no grammatical errors. Congrats.
hoho! how about...?

theoo

loves

dopey

reprobates

would that grease your goose, mcgrady??

Stuckey
11-21-2013, 03:51 AM
nothing profound

just feel like I'm being incorporated into society and my actions have a bigger impact like a ripple from a drop in a pond

as far as my brain, I think I've done so much damage to it with drugs and voluntary insomnia(poker)

Swaggin916
11-21-2013, 03:53 AM
btw, did you read any of those research studies on consciousness mapping that shklvr posted to your thread a month ago? they're so nerdy and dense that it would help me if someone else here got in to them a little bit, so as to compare notes.

I can't remember if I remember if I read that or not... but when I get some time I will go back and check them out. I definitely don't mind being a nerd for that kind of stuff ha. There was actually a book I tried to download "How to Create a Mind: The Secret of Human Thought Revealed. It seemed right up that alley... was a fake file though :mad: One day I will get around to reading it though.

To answer the questions about the books I am reading... Right now the main book is "The Social Animal", which is not surprisingly a sociology book. That book in addition to some other random studies I have seen on the internet have all same thing about the brain fully maturing as late as the mid twenties. Other books I am dabbling in are "Winning Body Language" by Bark Bowden, "War" by Robert Greene (really just got started with those two), 50 Psychology Classics" (I finished that one... mostly footnotes of 50 great psychology books), and I just downloaded "The Art of War" by Sun Tzu and a bunch of Brian Tracy stuff. It all started "The Power of Now" and "A New Earth" By Tolle though. That was my bible for 4 or 5 months, and then I gradually started paving my own way thinking about things for myself and making my own connections. Those books started the conscious awareness though and I have never looked back.


aren't you the dude that was in love with his best friend's girl?

what ever came of that? i didn't follow the thread to its conclusion but was interested

I am indeed! Nothing really. I moved out for like 5 months but now I am back living with them. I told both of them though before I moved out that I thought I had feelings for her. I was just so unconscious though... and super sexually frustrated. I went through a lot of shit though when I moved out because we got in argument which basically forced it (I said some things that cut really deep... wouldn't say such things now). I had a lot of growing to do as a person. It was necessary IMO for that growth. Now, I will never give another man's woman much attention at all... out of respect for the man, but also out self preservation. Unless of course I have a woman of my own who I can channel that attention towards... otherwise it's just bad karma all around.


To me basketball is one of the few things that's simple. If I practice hard, I play better. I want to dominate in games so I practice hard consistently. Other aspects in my life aren't so straightforward.

Sorry if I'm hijacking your positive thread OP.

No worries man :cheers:

And you can actually take that same philosophy in basketball and apply it to whatever you want to accomplish. Right I am doing basketball drills too. I give my full focus and attention to those drills when I do them, and the results are magical. Most of us men are hardwired to put our focus towards one thing and multitasking comes unconsciously... which is why it's good to have someone do stuff to you while you are practicing such as throw tennis balls you have to catch during dribbling drills. In order to focus on the tennis balls, dribbling has to become second nature (unconscious). Once dribbling is second nature, then your mind is free to see other things on the court. You're unconscious mind is waaaaaay more powerful than your conscious mind. It's the super computer... your auto pilot. The goal is to program your auto pilot to do what you want it do, not whatever it feels like doing. Take that same principle and apply it to anything and watch it work... consciously program your unconscious. That is one of the revelations I have recently had btw. After reading things related to it and some conversations it just clicked. Neural connection made... booya! Although like the one guy mentioned, once a connection is made it is hard to break (especially when your older). Those moments of transcendence can come back to bite you in the bum if you get to attached to them :D Which is why it is a good idea to keep challenging them and seeing how applicable they are to you.

TheReturn
11-21-2013, 11:41 AM
I can't remember if I remember if I read that or not... but when I get some time I will go back and check them out. I definitely don't mind being a nerd for that kind of stuff ha. There was actually a book I tried to download "How to Create a Mind: The Secret of Human Thought Revealed. It seemed right up that alley... was a fake file though :mad: One day I will get around to reading it though.

To answer the questions about the books I am reading... Right now the main book is "The Social Animal", which is not surprisingly a sociology book. That book in addition to some other random studies I have seen on the internet have all same thing about the brain fully maturing as late as the mid twenties. Other books I am dabbling in are "Winning Body Language" by Bark Bowden, "War" by Robert Greene (really just got started with those two), 50 Psychology Classics" (I finished that one... mostly footnotes of 50 great psychology books), and I just downloaded "The Art of War" by Sun Tzu and a bunch of Brian Tracy stuff. It all started "The Power of Now" and "A New Earth" By Tolle though. That was my bible for 4 or 5 months, and then I gradually started paving my own way thinking about things for myself and making my own connections. Those books started the conscious awareness though and I have never looked back.



I am indeed! Nothing really. I moved out for like 5 months but now I am back living with them. I told both of them though before I moved out that I thought I had feelings for her. I was just so unconscious though... and super sexually frustrated. I went through a lot of shit though when I moved out because we got in argument which basically forced it (I said some things that cut really deep... wouldn't say such things now). I had a lot of growing to do as a person. It was necessary IMO for that growth. Now, I will never give another man's woman much attention at all... out of respect for the man, but also out self preservation. Unless of course I have a woman of my own who I can channel that attention towards... otherwise it's just bad karma all around.



No worries man :cheers:

And you can actually take that same philosophy in basketball and apply it to whatever you want to accomplish. Right I am doing basketball drills too. I give my full focus and attention to those drills when I do them, and the results are magical. Most of us men are hardwired to put our focus towards one thing and multitasking comes unconsciously... which is why it's good to have someone do stuff to you while you are practicing such as throw tennis balls you have to catch during dribbling drills. In order to focus on the tennis balls, dribbling has to become second nature (unconscious). Once dribbling is second nature, then your mind is free to see other things on the court. You're unconscious mind is waaaaaay more powerful than your conscious mind. It's the super computer... your auto pilot. The goal is to program your auto pilot to do what you want it do, not whatever it feels like doing. Take that same principle and apply it to anything and watch it work... consciously program your unconscious. That is one of the revelations I have recently had btw. After reading things related to it and some conversations it just clicked. Neural connection made... booya! Although like the one guy mentioned, once a connection is made it is hard to break (especially when your older). Those moments of transcendence can come back to bite you in the bum if you get to attached to them :D Which is why it is a good idea to keep challenging them and seeing how applicable they are to you.
Yeah it's kinda cliche, but taking things one day at a time is probably the best way to go. Just consciously trying to get better one day at a time. I sound like a Lebron James postgame interview. :lol

Swaggin916
11-21-2013, 06:04 PM
Its funny because I have done all this soul searching, analyzing, etc. and came to realizations that are so cliche lol. Those cliche's exist for a reason. I heard something recently from Malcolm Gladwell that has stuck with me: Happiness = Reality - Expectations. Rid yourself of expectations, put in the work, and take it one day at a time... the results are great.

gigantes
11-21-2013, 09:37 PM
... To answer the questions about the books I am reading... Right now the main book is "The Social Animal", which is not surprisingly a sociology book. That book in addition to some other random studies I have seen on the internet have all same thing about the brain fully maturing as late as the mid twenties. Other books I am dabbling in are "Winning Body Language" by Bark Bowden, "War" by Robert Greene (really just got started with those two), 50 Psychology Classics" (I finished that one... mostly footnotes of 50 great psychology books), and I just downloaded "The Art of War" by Sun Tzu and a bunch of Brian Tracy stuff. It all started "The Power of Now" and "A New Earth" By Tolle though. That was my bible for 4 or 5 months, and then I gradually started paving my own way thinking about things for myself and making my own connections. Those books started the conscious awareness though and I have never looked back. ...
most of that sounds super-interesting. i'm mainly reading magazine articles and catching up with movies and TV these days after long neglect... haven't read that kind of book for months at this point.

so... feel free to start a topic if you hit an interesting section! :rockon:

Swaggin916
11-22-2013, 04:07 AM
most of that sounds super-interesting. i'm mainly reading magazine articles and catching up with movies and TV these days after long neglect... haven't read that kind of book for months at this point.

so... feel free to start a topic if you hit an interesting section! :rockon:

Will do man. I could literally start a new topic every couple of pages it seems like.

Theoo
11-22-2013, 07:17 AM
hoho! how about...?

theoo

loves

dopey

reprobates

would that grease your goose, mcgrady??
what hell a repritade