Quote from fearless9:
I have not read all 10 pages of this thread and I imagine that this has been stated many many times before.
"Be smart enough to change that which is within your means to change.
Be smart enough to let go that which is beyond your means to change.
And allow God to make you smart enough to recognize the difference."
Quote from Bernoulli:
Actually, not entirely true: to take one example, homicide rates are now near the same level they were in 1940. The biggest jump in homicide rates in this century was from 1900 to 1930.
<p>Television is a source of tremendous stress in several ways. In order to be healthy and happy, we need stimulation not stress. I listen to classical music from London all day long. I usually leave it on when I am trading. The television is usually on with the sound off. I like to watch sports with the sound off. There are a few shows that will get me to turn on the sound. I like to watch a Seinfeld rerun occasionally, they can still make me laugh. I will watch a classic movie on TCM. Good Eats is a show on the food channel that I really enjoy. City Confidential on A nd E will catch my attention from time to time. But that is pretty much the sum total of my viewing. <p>In conversations with friends, I often say that if I were teaching young people today, I would have them watch silent films and listen to old radio programs. These media were stimulating in ways in which television is not. Imagination is becoming a lost commodity in this modern world. It requires an imagination to read as well. <p>Not only is the content of television stressful so is its pace. I know from trading the market, that simply the pace of the market can be stressful, no matter if you are sitting on a winning trade or not. So it is with television, the bombardment of images and sounds, the shifts from commercials, the vast amount of information that is now being superimposed on the screen as text. One of the reasons that I do not listen to sports on television is not only that fact the announcers are more often promoting something rather than enhancing the enjoyment of the game, but television has decided to increas the volume and mix iof crowd noises and sound effects when visuals are put on the screen. I find all this unneccessary sound distracting as well as stressful.<p>I like all the choices that the miracles of mass media can provide. But we have to take charge of our cultural and intellectual environment in order to make it stimulating not stressful. If we do not take charge, the media will have it way with us, just as the market will have its way with us if we drop our guard. As I hit the post button Classic Fm is playing Meditation from Thais, my absolute favorite piece of music. What a world, market screens are still going (although I have called it a profitable day), I am using the internet to post something available to anyone with a computer and a hook-up, all the while listening to one of the great pieces of music broadcast over the internet from a distant shore.Quote from ElCubano:
the more you watch TV...the worse the world looks...information is not balanced....90% neg to 10% positive .. TURN OFF the tube and do more garden work...things will start to look bright again...
Quote from Ticketwatcher:
<p>Television is a source of tremendous stress in several ways. In order to be healthy and happy, we need stimulation not stress. I listen to classical music from London all day long. I usually leave it on when I am trading. The television is usually on with the sound off. I like to watch sports with the sound off. There are a few shows that will get me to turn on the sound. I like to watch a Seinfeld rerun occasionally, they can still make me laugh. I will watch a classic movie on TCM. Good Eats is a show on the food channel that I really enjoy. City Confidential on A nd E will catch my attention from time to time. But that is pretty much the sum total of my viewing. <p>In conversations with friends, I often say that if I were teaching young people today, I would have them watch silent films and listen to old radio programs. These media were stimulating in ways in which television is not. Imagination is becoming a lost commodity in this modern world. It requires an imagination to read as well. <p>Not only is the content of television stressful so is its pace. I know from trading the market, that simply the pace of the market can be stressful, no matter if you are sitting on a winning trade or not. So it is with television, the bombardment of images and sounds, the shifts from commercials, the vast amount of information that is now being superimposed on the screen as text. One of the reasons that I do not listen to sports on television is not only that fact the announcers are more often promoting something rather than enhancing the enjoyment of the game, but television has decided to increas the volume and mix iof crowd noises and sound effects when visuals are put on the screen. I find all this unneccessary sound distracting as well as stressful.<p>I like all the choices that the miracles of mass media can provide. But we have to take charge of our cultural and intellectual environment in order to make it stimulating not stressful. If we do not take charge, the media will have it way with us, just as the market will have its way with us if we drop our guard. As I hit the post button Classic Fm is playing Meditation from Thais, my absolute favorite piece of music. What a world, market screens are still going (although I have called it a profitable day), I am using the internet to post something available to anyone with a computer and a hook-up, all the while listening to one of the great pieces of music broadcast over the internet from a distant shore.
even in the locker room at my gym they have 3 plasmas going at once with 3 diff stations and then you get on the freaken treadmill and you look up to see 5-6 plasmas with more TV...its just toooo much info tooo oftenQuote from ElectricSavant:
Hello Don,
Would you entertain the thought of Karma in this. Is there such a thing as Karma? Is feeling good and happiness have anything to do with Karma? what is Karma?
Michael B.
whether it's helping out at the soup kitchen, or making and donating $billions to charities.
Quote from Don Bright:
Interesting, my brother and I disagree about karma when we chat, but at the same time, he believes that if a trader makes a large purchase (boat, fancy car, etc.) that he will suffer almost immediate losses...so "go figure".
I think that people can make themselves physically and mentally sick if they do "bad" things, often giving way to psychosis and worse. When you "lie, cheat, and steal" from loved ones, how good can you ever really feel? When you set yourself free from all the deception that may be within you, you tend to feel better ("the truth shall set you free"). This doesn't mean that you get "karma points" by helping the old lady cross the street, so you "should" make money on the opening that day.
Objectivity in business is a must. "Trust but verify" in global affairs and poker...and I honestly feel that everyone knows when they are doing the wrong thing...without paying Dr. Phil or going on Jerry Springer.
We are what we are, and there are no absolutes...we can "improve" or we can spiral into desperation, everyone is different.
Back to you...
Don