February 22nd, 2007
As you can see, I've changed my LJ scheme again. If my hair were long enough, I'd get it cut. Maybe I'll color it, just to get that change thing going.
Much of the junk that was atop the desk is now on the floor. Tonight we will sort and shred and toss.
I'm thinking of signing up for a My Space page--do you folks who have one find it worth the extra work?
Much of the junk that was atop the desk is now on the floor. Tonight we will sort and shred and toss.
I'm thinking of signing up for a My Space page--do you folks who have one find it worth the extra work?
- Mood:
giddy
I have the Big 5-0 in my sights. I have also heard it said that a writer's production declines after age 60. Understand that I heard this second hand, one person repeating the observation of another. Given that this another was a literary agent, one could say that the observation was likely valid, albeit anecdotal. It also bothered me, because I'm not exactly setting world land speed records as it is, and to think that things might decline starting pretty soon now...
So, I found this interesting. The rest of the clip is here. I can't access the entire article because I don't sub to WSJ.
Let's hear it for vocabulary and verbal abilities!
The Upside of Aging
Wall Street Journal (02/16/07) P. W1
Researchers have been accumulating evidence that while the human brain deteriorates in many aspects as people age, certain core cognitive functions actually strengthen, including vocabulary, verbal abilities, and cognitive functions behind a person's primary skills and hobbies.
Author: Begley, Sharon
Source: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1171590 82888010600-search.html
So, I found this interesting. The rest of the clip is here. I can't access the entire article because I don't sub to WSJ.
Let's hear it for vocabulary and verbal abilities!
The Upside of Aging
Wall Street Journal (02/16/07) P. W1
Researchers have been accumulating evidence that while the human brain deteriorates in many aspects as people age, certain core cognitive functions actually strengthen, including vocabulary, verbal abilities, and cognitive functions behind a person's primary skills and hobbies.
Author: Begley, Sharon
Source: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1171590
- Mood:
optimistic
