That closure is made more durable by the natural human instinct to seek information that buttresses our beliefs, confirms our biases.

I would've done that anyway.
Malesic, a professor of theology at King's College, had me at "The challenge is not to stop procrastinating; it is to procrastinate well and without guilt." The New Republic editors didn't hurt their cause by featuring a photo of the Dude abiding above the headline. Jeffrey Lebowski may, in fact, be the poster boy for procrastinating well and without guilt.
Couching his argument in the context of an increasingly knowledge-based and always-on work environment, Malesic proposes that procrastination is healthy, even necessary. "Procrastination, then, is not a failure of will; it is instead a rational way to safeguard self and sanity against work’s expansion."
I've always considered myself a rational person. Now I've got confirmation. Which in no way implies that I'm reading into Malesic's work a meaning that justifies my instinct. No way at all.
Here I am (and Monday I'll be) safeguarding self and sanity. May you feel good about putting off today what could be done tomorrow.
Couching his argument in the context of an increasingly knowledge-based and always-on work environment, Malesic proposes that procrastination is healthy, even necessary. "Procrastination, then, is not a failure of will; it is instead a rational way to safeguard self and sanity against work’s expansion."
I've always considered myself a rational person. Now I've got confirmation. Which in no way implies that I'm reading into Malesic's work a meaning that justifies my instinct. No way at all.
Here I am (and Monday I'll be) safeguarding self and sanity. May you feel good about putting off today what could be done tomorrow.
Great day yesterday Mark. Would have gone 0-2 if not for the Sooners comeback.
ReplyDeleteHeading to Jags game today with entire family. I'm sure this will turn out to be a great idea.
new shit has come to light . . . "inherent vice" is a rambling mess, and seems like it wants to be the big lebowski, but it doesn't quite have the humor-- i'm going on three days of watching and i still haven't finished it, nor do i know what's going on. did anyone watch this thing?
ReplyDeleteThis post is Clarence approved.
ReplyDeleteThank god for alka seltzer.
ReplyDeleteNihilists, dude
ReplyDeleteI tried the book, Dave, but couldn't get through 40 pages. I'm a PTA fanboy, but haven't watched it yet. But the collective silence of the typically adoring critics speaks volumes.
ReplyDeleteNice marmot.
ReplyDeleteRIP, Moses.
ReplyDeletei love pynchon but skipped the book, didn't hear much, and i love paul thomas anderson and the critics are kind of favorable on the movie and i don't understand why. i just watched twenty more minutes, i am determined to make it through but it's two and a half hours . ..
ReplyDeleteLooks like Stevie Wonder designed these new Browns uniforms.
ReplyDeleteJust finished a mini summit brunch with Marls, Mrs. Marls and Cousin Marls. Good times. Will probably meet up for a little beer and football later as well.
ReplyDeleteSomebody commented that the Browns jerseys look like the old Fubu jerseys. I agree.
ReplyDeleteSkins. Killing me. Again.
ReplyDeletezson refuses to believe that the word "cucumber" doesn't start with the letter q.
ReplyDeleteWheels up Dooblin for some golf and rugby. Cheers lads.
ReplyDeleteJags and Bucs game could be competitive Mark....we got that goin for us.
ReplyDeleteThe Bucs are a fucking embarrassment. Luckily I had my back turned to the screen as I enjoyed some beers with Marls and Co.
ReplyDelete"Marls & Co." sounds like a corporation. But what would its business be?
ReplyDeletelatex, drinking, and motivational speaking
ReplyDeletesome big boy tennising happening in new york
ReplyDeleteMarl & Co. is all about lambskins, not latex. They import diapers and export potato chips.
ReplyDeleteI've never seen Federer look as nervous as he did in the first set.
Would be Novak's 10th major if he won, leaving him seven behind Roger at the age of 28.
ReplyDeleteSeven is kind of a lot. McEnroe won seven. Edberg and Becker have six each.
ReplyDeletefederer blew it in the third set. he had chances. it's over now.
ReplyDeleteI blame it on his outfit.
ReplyDeletez, what do you think of this sabr kerfuffle? i think it's complete and utter nonsense. players have been sneaking in on second serves since the game was invented. boris becker is acting like it's akin to wearing white after labor day, an affront to societal norms.
ReplyDeleteI think it's fine. No one has come to net in like 15 years so seeing roger come in close on a second serve seems abnormal. But it used to happen more.
ReplyDeleteWow.
ReplyDeleteWow.
ReplyDeleteDjoker
ReplyDeleteOnions
And Becker still looks awful