Really
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Author: admin (Page 16 of 19)
Mike was listening to this lecture by behavioral economist Dan Ariely on the hidden reasons we think it’s OK to cheat or steal. Now, I didn’t listen to the lecture, but that answer is pretty apparent: cheating and stealing can give reproductive advantages when done successfully, so a genotype that allows for a moral code that allows you to cheat and steal when you won’t get caught is likely to be selected for. That may or may not be what this guy said, but that’s what makes sense to me.
More interesting is the little story Ariely tells about bandages and pains. Apparently, he was pretty badly burnt sometime in his pants and had bandages all over his body. When it was time to take them off, the nurse told him the best way to do it was to remove them quickly, so he’d have a lot of pain, but for a short period of time. He agreed to that, but then went on to research what was the best way to deal with the pain of removing bandages. He made a series of experiments (I wonder how he got approval to do those, given the amount of pain he must have inflicted on his willing participants), and found out that that was not the best way to deal with the pain of taking off bandages. The best way is:
-Start with the bandages in the most painful areas, so the pain will decrease over time.
-Remove bandages more slowly, lower pain for more extended periods is actually easier to bear than a lot of pain at once.
-Take a break between removing bandages, so you can rest from the periods of pain.
It all makes sense to me, and next time I have to remove a bandage or a band-aid, I’ll try his recommendations.
ABC News reports today, that a tiny bat may have hitched a ride on the space shuttle Discovery, which was headed to the international space station. The bat was seen clinging to the external fuel tank of the shuttle as it lifted off. Did he wake up and fly away? Did he end up somewhere in space? Let’s hope for the best š
Yes, I’ve been spending lots of money that I shouldn’t on kits of stuff to do with the girls. Yeah, I could play a board game with them, or play with their dolls (they’d love that) – but I personally hate playing. I hate it, I hate it, I hate it. Nothing makes me more anxious and unhappy as having to play little kids’ games. I’m waiting for them to be a little bit older so that we can play cards or more adult games, because for the time being, it’s just too painful.
Anyway, I have discovered that I do like doing “cosmetic” stuff with them. I’ve enjoyed making the bath salts from the Scientific Explorer’s Spa Science Chemistry Kit, making soaps from a couple of kits I bought, and doing experiments from another. In a way, it’s very similar to cooking, you put substances together and create something new that goes beyond the sum of its parts. And, of course, I love to cook.
The Scientific Explorer’s Perfumery kit seemed like the next logical thing to get. I found it on DeepDiscount.com for $15.50 (about $4.50 less than in most places, unfortunately it’s no longer available on that site), so I went for it. It arrived yesterday and I tried it this morning. Here is what I think of it:
The kit is very simple. It contains 5 small bottles of fragrances: apple, heliotrope,jasmine,lily of the valley and peppermint. Each fragrance contains sunflower oil with “perfume”, whatever that be. There are also 5 tiny plastic vials, where you can mix your fragrances, and 5 pipettes. And the instructions, of course. That’s it – for $15-20 bucks. As with Spa Science I feel that the most valuable part of the kit are the instructions. Unfortunately the instructions do not explain how to make the fragrances themselves. /What/, exactly, do I mix with sunflower oil to make fragrances myself? Essential oils? Actual perfume? Can I use those scents that came with my soap kits? (like this one). At least the instructions do tell you how to make essential oils from flowers: put the flowers in a jar, cover them with an odorless oil (sunflower, safflower, canola or corn all work), and let it stand for several weeks, adding more flowers when you can. You can do the same thing with herbs and spices. I think I’ll try that (though I’m sure my kids will be too impatient).
The whole point of the kit is to mix the different perfumes together to make your own scents. They give you two “recipes”, and then you are on your own. They do warn you against using too much peppermint. The only thing that I can surmise from the recipes, is that you put mostly one perfume, and then add small quantities of the other ones to change the smell. It’d be nice if there was more instruction as to how different smells interact with one another.
The other thing that is missing is information on what to do with the mixes once done. Do you apply them directly to your body? Do you first mix them with alcohol?
In any case, Mika and I had fun smelling and trying to identify the different scents. We weren’t very good at it (Camila, interestingly, was better) but it was fun. Camila mixed all the five scents randomly and made a mix that ended up being quite pleasant. I didn’t really enjoy the scent when smelling it directly from the vial, but once I mixed it with an equal quantity of vodka and applied it to our skin, it improved considerably. It also lasted for a couple of hours (which is longer than the cheap perfume I use, usually lasts). I’m pretty sure that Mika and I will enjoy doing it as well. I will also try using the scents we create in the soaps we make, hopefully they’ll work.
So in conclusion, once again I think the kit is too expensive for what it is, but as I wouldn’t have known where to start without it, I’m glad I bought it.
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