Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Review: Humans: A Brief History of How We F*cked It All Up

Humans: A Brief History of How We F*cked It All Up Humans: A Brief History of How We F*cked It All Up by Tom Phillips
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I loved how this book was written. Tom Phillips writes with such confidence and tells his points very bluntly - while being very entertaining and funny. I also like how the beginning of the book starts with creation and Lucy, and as the book goes on it discusses later things in history.

I marked it as a re-read because Tom Philips refers to things in history that I totally don't remember haha and he basically just discusses the things in history that we went wrong but I want the whole story.

You will think after this book that humans are really stupid but in fact Tom Phillips gas gathered all the really ridiculously stupid moments into one book. It's like calling humans totally stupid from reading the The Darwin Awards for all the stupid ways humans have died.
Are some of us very dumb? Yes.
Do the smart ones also have their moments of stupidity? Yes.
We're definitely not perfect.
But this book takes all those stupid moments and compiles it together.
So just remember that we're not THAT stupid and hopefully through history and through Tom Phillips writing about all the mistakes we can go forward and not makes the same mistakes again lol but... history repeats itself so *shrugs*

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Tuesday, October 29, 2019

Review: The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives

The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives by Leonard Mlodinow
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

Got through 80% and decided to stop lol... Couldn't take it any longer. This book is extremely dry and boring. Although there are some valuable things to learn from it.

But I thought this book was going to have more to do with psychology but it has more to do with statistics and probabilities - mathematics... And do you know what my least favorite subject was in all of my Business degree? ... Statistics... Maybe it's because I'm not interested in it, maybe because I just don't understand it, but I hated and still hate it lol I think if were to want to learn about it I'd rather it in a textbook form and not a book.

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Monday, October 28, 2019

Review: The Happiness Advantage: The Seven Principles of Positive Psychology That Fuel Success and Performance at Work

The Happiness Advantage: The Seven Principles of Positive Psychology That Fuel Success and Performance at Work The Happiness Advantage: The Seven Principles of Positive Psychology That Fuel Success and Performance at Work by Shawn Achor
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This book was good but not ground breaking to me.

Shawn Achor mostly takes studies he's found among some of his own studies he's personally done personally and at Harvard. He also often takes excerpts from Malcolm Gladwell and other authors and just skims the surface. It's almost strange to quote another author while that other author is references other studies. It's like a reference to a reference lol

This book is amazing if you're new to psychology and just getting into it because it summarizes many interesting topics. But if you're like me and like to dive into the details behind it all this book isn't for you.

Notes:
- "So how do the scientists define happiness? Essentially, as the experience of positive emotions—pleasure combined with deeper feelings of meaning and purpose. Happiness implies a positive mood in the present and a positive outlook for the future. Martin Seligman, the pioneer in positive psychology, has broken it down into three, measurable components: pleasure, engagement, and meaning. His studies have confirmed (though most of us know this intuitively) that people who pursue only pleasure experience only part of the benefits happiness can bring, while those who pursue all three routes lead the fullest lives
- Barbara Fredrickson, a researcher at the University of North Carolina and perhaps the world’s leading expert on the subject, describes the ten most common positive emotions: joy, gratitude, serenity, interest, hope, pride, amusement, inspiration, awe, and love.
- Barbara Fredrickson has termed the “Broaden and Build Theory.” Instead of narrowing our actions down to fight or flight as negative emotions do, positive ones broaden the amount of possibilities we process, making us more thoughtful, creative, and open to new ideas.
- A recent University of Toronto study found that our mood can actually change how our visual cortex—the part of the brain responsible for sight—processes information
- People who put their heads down and wait for work to bring eventual happiness put themselves at a huge disadvantage, while those who capitalize on positivity every chance they get come out ahead.
research even shows that regular meditation can permanently rewire the brain to raise levels of happiness, lower stress, even improve immune function
- Anticipating future rewards can actually light up the pleasure centers in your brain much as the actual reward will.
- A long line of empirical research, including one study of over 2,000 people, has shown that acts of altruism—giving to friends and strangers alike—decrease stress and strongly contribute to enhanced mental health
- Contrary to the popular saying, money can buy happiness, but only if used to do things as opposed to simply have things. In his book Luxury Fever, Robert Frank explains that while the positive feelings we get from material objects are frustratingly fleeting, spending money on experiences, especially ones with other people, produces positive emotions that are both more meaningful and more lasting. Spending money on other people, called “prosocial spending,” also boosts happiness.
- Each time we use a skill, whatever it is, we experience a burst of positivity. If you find yourself in need of a happiness booster, revisit a talent you haven’t used in a while.
- Countless other studies have shown that consistently grateful people are more energetic, emotionally intelligent, forgiving, and less likely to be depressed, anxious, or lonely. And it’s not that people are only grateful because they are happier, either; gratitude has proven to be a significant cause of positive outcomes.
- But armed with positivity, the brain stays open to possibility. Psychologists call this “predictive encoding”: Priming yourself to expect a favorable outcome actually encodes your brain to recognize the outcome when it does in fact arise
- Turns out, there was one—and only one —characteristic that distinguished the happiest 10 percent from everybody else: the strength of their social relationships."

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Review: The Witches

The Witches The Witches by Roald Dahl
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

If I read this as a kid it would have gotten 5/5 stars. I still really enjoyed it!

First book I've ever read that the main character does not have a name!

Roald Dahl has such a talent... such an open imaginative unconventional mind.

The ending snagged at my heart a bit <3 The Heart of a Mouse

My biggest issue with the book was that I like to think witches are cool, sexy, powerful, and mysterious but the witches in this story are retched, vile, evil, bald, ugly beings lol. They're sole joy in life is to find ways to make children disappear.

My only other issue was that the beginning dragged sometimes, like when Grandmama was telling the boy about what witches were like. And dragged a bit too much when the boy was listening in on the witches meeting. Also - why does "the boy" not have a name??? lol

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Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Review: The Silent Patient

The Silent Patient The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

LOVED it! The writting, the characters, the murder mystery plot, the psychological thinking, everything.
This book surprised me because I usually don't read this genre but it was amazing. I'm going to have to make a whole new shelf "Read-Fav-Psychological-Thriller" and have only this book in it lmao
This book would make a great movie. Turns out Alex Michaelides is a screen play writer so go figure :P

I don't remember a time when I was THIS hooked on a book haha Possibly Hunger Games when I engulfed it in a day. This book is longer though so it took me two days XD I got through half the first day and I liked the book it was interesting and had an intriguing "who dunnit" plot. The next day I just engulfed the book... from 50% to 100% I didn't even have a status update! 0 to 100 real quick... I didn't have time for anything else, dinner was hot and ready on the table and I just had to finish the last bit of this book. It's been a while since a book did that to me, to that extent lol

Loved all the characters they were all very different and unique. Like any murder mystery each character had something off and odd about them to make you second guess if they were the killer lol I enjoyed how the more and more you read the book the more and more you learned about Alicia and her past, as well as the main character Theo. I found his way of thinking to be very relatable. I'm a psych minor and I love psychological thinking.

Loved the greek story of Alcestis and all the greek references.

The oooooooooooonly thing I really disliked in this book was in Alicia's diary. Her diary was told as if it was a narrative into present time, with real live dialogue. It was written like a screen play as if we'e seeing her in the past on screen but it's not a screen it's a book. This is Alex Michaelides screen play comfort in play probably. But there's literally full out quoted dialogue he said she said and noooooo one writes in their diary like that lol

(view spoiler)

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Monday, October 21, 2019

Review: The Longevity Paradox: How to Die Young at a Ripe Old Age

The Longevity Paradox: How to Die Young at a Ripe Old Age The Longevity Paradox: How to Die Young at a Ripe Old Age by Steven R. Gundry
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I couldn't rate this book higher :P One of my favs of this year for sure! This book has made a huge impact on my life. It's not a huge book but it took foooooreeeeever to read because I was continually writing down notes! It's literally like a science textbook that you just want to learn everything there is on the topic.

Key take aways:
- everything to do with your health basically stems from your gut health
- Even if you’re vegan you still consume antibiotics
- simple sugars and artificial sweeteners are terrible for your gut health
- ibuprofen and Advil blow gaping holes in the intestinal barrier
- cell autophagy is very important to allow the body to detoxify itself, it happens on a calorie deficit diet, intermittent fasting, or fasting - it's good for you because it's bad for you
- through ketosis you can promote growth and activation of stem cells which can transform into any type of cell needed and repair the body. "Stem cell therapy" is reinjecting stem cells into the body.
- Pu’erh and green tea are great
- Eat polyphenols- plant compounds that nourish gut buddies and stimulate autophagy - best most powerful resveratrol found in grapes, wine and berries and the reason why red wine is protective against heart diseases
- Eating meat is linked to Alzheimer’s
- A myth is that a high metabolic rate keeps you young. Meat makes you spend a lot of energy digesting that’s why carnivores like lions are always sleeping.
- with improved gut health it is possible to cure Arthritis
- Remove foods with WGA in your diet, in all whole wheat, whole grains including pasta, bread and crackers, barley and brown rice
- Stray far away from foods with “Natural flavours” it's MSG in disguise, and avoid aspartame because it converts to MSG in your gut
- try not to eat 4hr before you sleep
- Olive oil is great for your gut health
- Take Omega 3, Vit D, Vit C, B vitamins, prebiotics, probiotics
- Do meditative yoga
- Eat tree nuts, peanuts are actually shit for you and cashews are not even nuts they're seeds

There's some things I am iffy on though... if your tall you have a higher chance of cancer lol as well as only eat fruit in the summer so your body can recoup in the winter.

Notes:
- Our gut microbiome is the most determining factor for how long we live and the quality of life. Your gut bacteria is effected more so from your environment and who you live with and spend the most time with. This influences what you eat and your physical activity the most. Surprisingly this is more influential than your actual genetics. Your gut is more similar to the person you live with compared to your own mother!
- Mitochondria are in every cell in your body and are the cellular digestives system (they break down nutrients to produce energy). Their DNA is passed down from the mothers egg. A child also gets passed down the mothers bacteria from the vagina in birth, and breast milk for food.
- Mitochondria are responsible for cell signalling, cellular differentiation, what a cell should become, cell death and cell growth. Thus Mitochondria play an important part in the aging process.
The Mitochondria's sister is in the gut and they message each other using hormones and chemical signals.
- Iron actually ages you lol and a high metabolic rate actually ages you too
- Bad for the guy microniome is lectins which are a sticky protein that defends plants from insects, it’s hurts bugs but we’re stronger with our mucous, and have no immediate effect but it still adds up in the gut and makes them upset
- Rodents have hundred of times more of an enzyme called protesayze in their gut which breaks down Le tins and other grain proteins
- Mole rats eat roots
- When you take an antibiotic it negatively effects your gut biome for up to 2 years
- Studies show that every time you take a course of antibiotics you increase the chance of getting chromes disease, diabetes, obesity, or asthma later in life
- Meat and diary have antibiotics in them from preventing sickness to the animal and fattening them up and then you consume those antibiotics buy eating the meat and dairy
- Even if you’re vegan you still consume antibiotics from glyphosine the main ingredient in the herbicide round up now owned by bayer are sprayed onto crops
- Another problem with Glyphosate - reduces the livers ability to convert vitamin D to its active form so it can absorb calcium
- Bad bacteria in your gut love sugar. Specifically simple sugars, you body actually needs complex sugars “poly saccharides”. Even artificial sugars are bad like Sucralose, saccharine, aspartame.
- A duke university study showed that a single Splenda packet destroys 50% of normal intestinal flora.
- Even fructose the sugar in fruit is poison to mitochondria
- Common causes anti inflammatory: ibuprofen and Advil blow gaping holes in the intestinal barrier
- Calorie restrictive diet - dramatically decrease bacteria growth and distribution. It also stimulates cell autophagy in the gut (where cells eat the bad cells) thinning the gut bacteria to only the strongest fittest ones that will work the hardest to maintain gut wall integrity
- Pu’er tea - promotes bacteria that makes you form more mucous to strengthen the gut bacteria
- When you can get stem cells from your body from fat and bone marrow, and reinjecting them it promotes less aging. They can become any type of cell. Regenerate aging tissues. Stem cell therapy.
As we age stem cells start to lose the ability to regenerate unless you activate them. Temporarily stress yourself out can activate it. “Keto diet” ketosis.
- University of Southern California study - participants that underwent a 5-day vegan calorie deficit once a month or a few days of water only fasting had increased levels of stem cells. Fasting also triggers auotphagy in immune cells. Fasting makes the bag guys tear away at gut lining so your body sends stem cell reinforcements. So fasting is good for you because it is bad for you. But if you’re lacking in Vit D3 then the stem cells reinforcements don’t get activated - malnutrition
polyamines - at least 10% increase in life expectancy, it promotes cell autophagy. Examples: shellfish like squid oyster crab scallops, fermented foods, cruciferous vegetables, leafy greens, mushrooms, matcha green tea, nuts and seeds hazelnuts walnuts pastachio, chicken liver, aged cheeses, lentils
- Eat polyphenols- plant compounds that nourish gut buddies and stimulate autophagy - best most powerful resveratrol found in grapes, wine and berries and the reason why red wine is protective against heart diseases
- 7 deadly myths of aging: Mediterranean diet promotes - grains. Resistant starches increase your gut buddy population, enhance digestion and nutrient absorption and foster growth of gut buddies that nurture the all important mucus layer in the gut. Do not eat large amounts of animal protein it gives inflammation myth #2 animal protein is essential for long term strength and longevity.
- Eating meat is linked to Alzheimer’s
- Another myth is high metabolic rate keeps you young. Meat makes you spend a lot of energy digesting that’s why carnivores like lions are always sleeping.
- Myth it’s important to get plenty enough iron as you age. People who donated blood often loved significantly longer than people who donated less often. Lots of iron in meat. Women live longer and the time of the month releases some iron
- Myth Saturated fats should not be demonized.
- Myth: milk does the body good. If you have milk then don’t pick cow, pick goat and sheep milk
- Cancer thrives off sugar
- Anti cancer foods are tree nuts. Two servings per week cuts your chance of getting cancer in half
- Heart disease and arthritis - make your guy buddies happy and it could cure arthritis. Arthritis isn’t caused by wear and tear it’s the gut buddies.
- Remove foods with WGA in your diet, in all whole wheat, whole grains including pasta, bread and crackers, barley and brown rice
- monosodium glutamate (MSG) - “Natural flavours”, aspartame converts to MSG in your gut
- Try and leave a full 4hr before bedtime to not eat so if you go to bed at 11, stop eating at 7. This gives the chance for your gut to digest most of everything so your brain can sleep soundly at night
- Big on olive oil - anti inflammatory properties because of the polyphenols. Spikes cell atophagy. Helps neurons repair themselves from inflammation. Supports growth of new neurons
- Omega 3 and eating baked fish promotes longevity. Daily sardines, herring, small fish.
- Regular Daily Leafy greens too
- Meditative yoga makes gut buddies happy, lowers stress
- Stray away BPA so avoid canned foods, buy frozen food if you have to. Use glassware instead of plastic for food storage. Never hear up food in plastic container, even receipts have BPA
- Taking vitamin c prevents sun damage. It’s also a beauty vitamin but the issue of that it is water soluble is you let it out in your urine. If you have too much vitamin c you’ll get diarrhea. Truce a day 1,000mg time release is good
- Arsenic is a well known poison is also antibiotic and hormone disrupter. Stop eating conventional chicken, avoid grains like rice
- Avoid blue light especially at night
- Stop using anti-bacterial cleaners on skin you’re killing the bad and the good
- Cranberry oil is good for your skin too, lots of polyphenols
- Take prebiotics. Probiotics are the gut buddies themselves, prebiotics are the fibrous long sugars they eat
- Yams, rootabega, sweet potato, mushrooms, artichokes, endives are good sources of prebiotics
- More acromencia bacteria is good you’ll look younger
- Ground flaxseed, it’s has prebiotics fiber and significant type of polyphenols and b vitamins, omega fatty acids, intoanflammatory too. Once it’s grounded though it goes bad fast so keep it in the fridge or grind it when you eat it
- Artichokes - lots of prebiotic fiber. Vitamins a, b, c and e as well as calcium and magnesium. High antioxidant and polyphenol which helps your liver. Just buy frozen artichoke hearts
- Leeks - loaded with polyphenols and alison a compound that increases blood vessels flexibility and reduces cholesterol. Cut them in half long way and wash them thoroughly
- Okra - prebiotic fiber. Vitamin c and a, iron and phosphorus and zinc. Sautay over very high heat or roast it until crispy. Can get them frozen too just make sure to thaw and pat dry to cut down on slimy factor
- Cruciferous veggies - broccoli cauliflower and Brussels sprouts
- Cashews are seeds and full of lectins
- Real nuts - walnuts, macadamia nuts, hazelnuts, and pistachios
- Mushrooms -heat does not affect them,
- Low sugar fruits - avocado, green bananas, raspberries and blackberries, figs and coconuts,
- Healthy fats - fish oil shell fish egg yolk,
- 70% and above dark chocolate
- Green tea
- Bad bugs - simple sugars and starches, glucose sucrose fructose, incl fruit. Avoid grapes they’re high in sugar. Mangoes tons of sugar. Bananas. Lychees. Apples. Pineapple. Pears but Anjou is fine. Sugar substitutes. Conventional dairy products because of caseine. Bad fats like saturated fats. Peanut oil full of lectins. Grape seed oil, canola oil.
- Even if you take calorie deficit for 5 days out of the month its as much as a whole month calorie restrictive
- Omega 1000mg DHA, nature’s bounty at Costco is fine, or cod liver oil


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Review: The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing

The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing by Marie Kondō
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book is perfect for getting motivation and a game plan on how to declutter your home.

It definitely gave me the motivation to start and make a game plan of how I'm going to tackle all the "stuff." Picking up each item one by one and asking myself if it sparks joy.

What it really comes down to is if you continually need to clean your home - that just means that you have too much stuff and you don't have a proper home for your things. Your home will never be clean and organized if you keep endless amounts of stuff. And all the stuff makes you loose focus of what you truly love and want to keep. The treasure get hidden amongst random stuff.

Once you clean your home you are able to focus on the more important things in life, like your health and well being.

I'm surprised this book didn't touch on "minimalism" because it almost did but didn't coin the term. It says to get rid of all the things you don't truly love and find practical but it didn't talk specifically about "minimalizing" your home.

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Review: The Song of Achilles

The Song of Achilles The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I love this story! I loved the movie Troy and this book is even better! This book seems more true to the actual story of Achilles and specifically Patroclus.

The story is told from Patroclus' perspective and we learn a lot about Achilles and their loving passionate relationship. This is my first LGBT book and I'm definitely impressed! I also love how they added more about the gods in this book compared to the movie.

I love Achilles character; such a strong legendary warrior yet such a tender heart at the same time, so unique and conflicted.

Patroclus really loved Achilles, like really really loved him :)

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Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Review: The One

The One The One by Kiera Cass
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

(2.5/5 stars) This series is so easy and quick to gobble up. It's very juvenile and I have many issues with it but I don't even feel like getting into it. It's just a very YA novel lol

Kiera Cass has effectively extended this one story to be a whole series and the fact that she got away with this boggles my mind lol This series is so long winded and when you really think about it it's boring and pointless. The story is decent but when you think about it a lot of it is obsolete.

But I do enjoy the parts in between and the characters. It kinda reminds me of The House of Night by P. C. Cast and Kristin Cast because of how simple and boring of a story is yet how it still makes for a decent book/series.

This series is basically my guilty pleasure and it helps me stay with my reading goal challenge lol

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Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Review: The Cruel Prince

The Cruel Prince The Cruel Prince by Holly Black
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

(3.5/5 stars) This book always kept me on my toes, it was suspenseful and I was always wondering where it was going next. It was pretty Game of Thrones like with all the politics, war, and gruesomeness. I would describe it as a fairytale/castle/court/political power plot.

Holly Black writes each sentence so dense with description and meaning! It's definitely not a book to listen to in the car lol you have to pay a lot of attention to it.

There's a good amount of description mixed with dialogue.

This isn't a book for YYA (younger younger adult) lol More so like late teens at least.

Holly Black is a good world builder, this book would make a good movie.

Cardon is such a mean bully yet I was attracted to him from the start for some reason lol He's just so hot and powerful XD shame Leah... shame... shame....

And oh man the vocabulary!!! Sheesh I'm having to google a word every few minutes...
New words to learn from reading this book: obeisance, capricious, effusive, machination, magnanimous, solemn, abdicate, euphemism, fealty, conciliatory, opulent, pretension, and many more...

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Thursday, October 10, 2019

Review: Cinder

Cinder Cinder by Marissa Meyer
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

It's kinda meh to me. I enjoyed it, but definitely doesn't get a 4/5 star for me, and the writing and story was better than a 2/5 sooooo 3/5.

I'm not sure how to pinpoint why I didn't like it as much as I'd hoped because it's a decent story with decent characters. Maybe it was the frustration I had to the injustice of treatment Cinder gets from her legal guardian and sisters. I found myself zoning out from this book on multiple occasions and had to re-read the page. Maybe it's just too juvenile for me.

While reading this book I thought that maybe I just needed a break from the YA Fantasy genre. But then I read Graceling by Kristin Cashore and was in love with it so now IDEK lol I also think the hype and high ratings killed it in a way for me, my expectations were set too high and I just expected more.

The main protagonist and the story really reminds me of Alita :P Where Alita meets Cinderella XD The main character is a mechanic who works on fixing bots, and she's part cyborg. She has a crush on the prince. Prince is having a ball. There's a fearful plague spreading with no cure.

I won't be continuing the series.

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Wednesday, October 9, 2019

Review: Graceling

Graceling Graceling by Kristin Cashore
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

For a YA novel this is totally 5/5 stars. About how much I really loved it and would want to re-read it gahhhh it's tough i might give it a 4/5 or 4.5/star. I really liked the characters and story and progression but could it have been better... gahhhhh yeaaaaa well a bit yea idk, maybe if I re-read it it would get a 5/5 next time we'll see. I've been wanting to read this book since 2012 and I should have read it so much sooner!

The basic story - Random people are blessed with a "grace" which gives them a heightened random skill. It could be anything from climbing trees to reading minds, to killing people. Katsa has a fighters grace and she protects the king. Then she meets an interesting character named Po and things all change.

I just inhaled this book lol It's more romantic than I thought this was going to be, but I'm glad. I just wish Katsa was a bit older.

I loved the whole survival aspect and writing of this book. Man this is such a breath of fresh air in the YA genre... It's like YA but the quality you get from a true classic Fantasy novel it's superb. I'm now following Kristin Cashore ;) Go to her page and read her About me section it's amazing, what a great personality. And Bitterblue is sooooo cute"

I'm def a fan girl for Po lol... but seriously why the name Po? Did you have to give a hot guy the name of a teletubby?! XD

I wanna be a Lienid princess :P

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Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Review: How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us about Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence

How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us about Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us about Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence by Michael Pollan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This book has really changed the way I see drugs lol Specifically psychedelic drugs like psilocybin (aka shrooms) and Lysergic acid diethylamide (aka LSD).

You can't get addicted to them and they can't kill you - something I thought the opposite of growing up from all the brainwashing. I mean it's good they brainwash you as a child not to do drugs but they technically are feeding kids lies. It's because children should definitely not take any drug because they are so weak and malleable they would go down the wrong path. But later in life when you have the knowledge and self control to take it properly it's not bad.

It can cure alcoholism, smoking habits, depression, and even the fear of death. These trips take you onto a spiritual journey that the ego has no part in. You surrender to it's divine power. You let down your walls and guards to realize true meaning. Mind you it has to be in the right environment when you take the drug and it's encouraged to get a professional guide that can lead you on the journey. The trip makes you think differently, see things differently and find true meaning and value in things. People say that it's a life changing experience and they see the world completely different now.

The results that these people had sounded a bit like how Landmark affected me. I found that we are meaning making machines and you can make your own meaning out of anything you choose to. And most importantly that we are all connected into one larger entity and at the end of the day we are all the same.

Many artists and successful people became successful after a trip because it opened their minds and allowed them to see their true potential and purpose.

If I find a suitable guide that could take me on a trip I would totally do it.

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Wednesday, October 2, 2019

Review: The Lightning Tree

The Lightning Tree The Lightning Tree by Patrick Rothfuss
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I mean anything Patrick Rothfuss writes automatically get's a 5/5 star haha idc

This short book is about a daily life of Bast.

He sits by the lightning tree and makes deals with children lol
"What would you like in trade? An answer, a favor, a secret?” - Bast

It was so nice hearing from Basts POV! I feel like I got to know him a lot better. Even though I know he can be a bit conniving and sneaky - I trust him more now. Now that I know what he's up to on a daily basis lol I seriously see him as like a jest/joker/free servant to Kvothe.

“She’s sweet as cream and broad of beam." - Bast

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Review: Reminders of Him

Reminders of Him by Colleen Hoover My rating: 5 of 5 stars View all my reviews