Friday, 30 April 2021

Brave New World


 


This is truer now than ever before, and more so as automatons kill weeds in fields, drive tractors, irrigators (see link below ), pick goods in warehouses, make cars, pick-load-CNC and then package things. As we make ourselves redundant, we then look for new things to do, new roles to fulfil our lives. We lack direction and meaning because we are told that without working for forty hours a week our lives are meaningless.

You may argue that in the developing and third world these things and ideas are luxuries they can ill afford. However, the simple question is: If those people in developing economies lack employment now, will they ever find a place for people to do jobs in the future? 

I would suggest, no.

At the top of the pyramid `The Man' decides to buy a few 24/7/365 machines that require minimal human input just for programming and maintenance. And an entire economy leapfrogs, in one bound past all those willing but idle hands, with their demands for pay, rights, fair treatment, pensions. Will it solve the problem of those populations? Probably not, if you confine your thinking to the way we work now. However, if you think about Universal Basic Income, and driving the stress of the grind out of your life. Would you then find that people are more content, less fractious, less likely to be forced into creating progeny they can't afford financially, but need anyway, to preserve their genetic stock and family name?

It sounds a little utopian, and it's a way off anyway, but I would argue that it's inevitable and that the sooner we embrace living rather than existing, the sooner we will be a happier species.

https://www.igus.co.uk/info/laser-robots-for-farming

Tuesday, 6 April 2021

Fitness returning slowly

 A few weeks back I said I was going to have to get back on the fitness horse and try to get back in shape after an injury. 

Well, I've mostly done it. It wasn't easy for the first couple of weeks, it was still cold, windy and dark. I kept on wondering if I was trying to regain some sense of youth long since gone, and if on balance I'd be far better off taking things a bit easier and slowing down? I can't. Is the simple response. I think I have a crossed wire or some sort of shortcircuit that overrides this fantasy of sitting back and ageing gracefully. I simply can't and even if I try, I just end up anxious like a wasp trapped in a jar. All jokes aside, I rather suspect that there is some underlying syndrome that pushes me, sometimes, even when I shouldn't be pushing. However, I would also strongly suspect that there is a genetic component to this syndrome because my dad was the same as is my younger brother.

I started with little steps, I had a week of back and forth with my surgery trying to get them to see things from my perspective and was fortunate enough to speak to a doctor, who could see from my bloodwork that the diet that supports my `general' lifestyle strongly suggested that I do usually keep myself in a reasonable state of fitness. He suggested a month-long course of Naproxen to settle my tennis elbow, assist the lumbar spine in settling down and to dull of the injury to the intercostal muscles. It's one of those daft situations that you look at retrospectively and think `idiot'. I had no idea you could take a month-long course of Naproxen, if I had, I think I would have requested it, never mind.

I let the medication do its work for a few days, and then did some test walks. Over the course of maybe a fortnight I extended my range from three-hundred-and-sixty odd PACES (maybe 400mtrs) out to 800mtrs and then in a few more days to just over 4k. This said, it was in only one direction and Amanda picked me up a couple of times, as the walks back home would have resulted in too much the disk-compression and subsequent sciatica.

As soon as I had the walking legs back, I decided a few short test cycles would be sensible. The first time back on the bike was an eye-opener. By the time I had pedalled from our house to the main road I was breathless, my legs were ruined and I thought I'd have to go home... but, that isn't the way I'm made, so I pushed on. Through the lens of hindsight, it wasn't one of my best ideas. I cycled into town, 2.4k thinking the wind would be behind me on the way home, not realising because I'd been far too deep in thought and apprehension at the start, to notice the wind was at my back on the way into town, and therefore in my face all the way home. By the time I'd realised my mistake I was committed to the route home which is 3.4k, and is very exposed, and with the wind in my face for at least two-thirds of the distance. That cycle ride became a test of endurance in spite of the relatively short distance. The important thing is I made it home and my back didn't complain, but I did have secondary neuropathy and spasmodic cramps in the left leg.

A couple of days later I could barely move, I felt fluey and exhausted, but also very satisfied. since that day and throughout I've kept up a fairly regular routine of walks and cycles, and for those two activities, I can say with reasonable certainty I have my cardio-vascular fitness back. I'm basing my current workouts around the principles of HIT (High-Intensity Training) to maximise impacts in a short amount of time, but also because cycling fifty miles in a day is practically impossible for me nowadays. The short cycles, lunges and squats are enough for maintenance. There is a but coming... swimming pools reopen on the 12th of April 2021. I suspect that while the underlying cardio-vascular fitness will help. The actual swim fitness will be a problem. I don't think it will be insurmountable, but I do think it's going to take some effort because the truth is that while I had the Naproxen to settle my various aches and pains down. I took the opportunity that the medication provided to crack on down in the shed, finishing my work benchs, and starting a bed renovation project. The upshot is that I had to make a choice between, manual work or weights and upper-body work. I plumbed for manual work so I could have somewhere to work as the summer waxes. The downside is that for the first time in, I don't know how long? Maybe ten years, I have moobs where previously I had pecks, and it's a similar story for biceps and triceps; they have all faded. So in terms of the main swimming engines -things could be better- but we'll see. I do have some very useful working space, and as I said a couple of months back. I enjoy the rebuild process in some slightly masochistic way.

Final note, on Easter Monday Amanda and I went off to Holford Coombe for a low-level walk (I'd estimate 200mtrs max elevation... nothing really, but with decent views, and lots of spring bird-song). We were out for four hours, it was easy enough on the legs, the breathing was a bit raggedy, but overall I was chuffed. That little goal of walking on the Quantcks being achieved and before summer has given me quite a boost.

Friday, 12 March 2021

Vaccination Covid-19

 I had my first jab on the 11th of March 2021. 

I have to confess that I'm not a fan of annual vaccinations for Flu, and so I was just a bit nervous about getting the Covid jab.

I probably need to clarify that I am not Anti-vaccination in any way. However, I do have a history of adverse reactions to some vaccines. Years ago I worked at London City Airport, on both the land and airside, and in areas where international passengers would be or would have been. This necessitated me having a course of both Tetanus and Hepatitis jabs. 

I had no problem with the jabs in principle, and in truth, I'd had so many Tetanus jabs as a kid I probably didn't need the Tetanus jab. But what the hey it was free? I had the jabs. 

I was floored for a day and bit. I suspect based on previous experience with tetanus, that the issues arose from the Hepatitis jab, but there is no way of knowing. Three jabs over the course of a few weeks and three incidents of feeling as `Fluy' as you can without having the Flu, even with a Piroton chaser, as administered by the Airports in-house GP.

Many years later, I qualified for a free annual Flu jab, my previous experience with the Hepatitis jab was long-forgotten. This was probably a good thing as I went for the Flu jab with no qualms whatsoever. However, the reaction to the Flu jab was 80% of the way to waking up with Flu (if you have actually had Flu you will know what this is like, it's not the sniffles, it's not a cold or a chill. Flu can be a killer and a proper dose of Flu will leave you in doubt whatsoever of it's potential for being lethal). I digress. The effects lasted at least five days and waned a bit each day. However, within a twenty-four hour period, I had gone from being as chipper as a chipper thing with extra chips to being laid out, off sick from work.

The following year I "swerved" the vaccination (that's a colloquial term for ducked my responsibility). The following year, my annual asthma review happened to coincide with the start of the Flu jab season and there was no escape. The nurse practitioner I was seeing just said `well while you're here you may as well have your Flu jab (or words to that effect). The next day I remember going into town for work and bailing out, and coming home mid-morning.

This seasonal Flu jab reaction is my standard. I'm old enough and wise enough now to know, that I need to book the jab for a Friday, ideally in the afternoon, because without a doubt there is going to be some unpleasantness involved. This said the 2020 Flu jab is probably the least bad I've ever had. My arm felt like it was hanging off for a week, but other than that I was fine, 2019 on the other hand was a typical reaction, freezing cold shivering aching hateful affair.

So back to the Covid Jab and my trepidation. 

Noting of any significance to report. If I swing my left arm back to its full extent I can feel the ache in the injection site. No chills, no headache, nothing. Have the jab, and let's get back to as normal as we can and hope that resurgent variants don't undo the fantastic work of scientists, the NHS (all of it), and all the thousands of volunteers making this process best in class.

Advising-individuals-with-allergies-on-their-suitability-for-astrazeneca-covid-19-vaccine

Friday, 5 March 2021

Relative orbits of the planets

This is one of these things that once you have seen it, you'll think to yourself... `Have I just assumed all the planets do the same thing as Earth just at different speeds around the sun.




Cause of Death

 What I find interesting about this list, is the lack of deaths due to mythical creatures. Clearly, by the 17th Century, Ghosts, Bugaboos, Wyverns, Witches, Werewolves, Vampires, Dragons etc were all extinct.

However, equally interesting is how their once-legendary nefariousness has stuck in the human psyche.











Joe Rogan, Siddharth Kara: Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives.

Ok, so this isn’t my usual fare (and hello … I have been absent, it happens, I’m a very busy man all of a sudden). Below is an economist Edi...