catarina
Galiza state of mind
- 4 Posts
- 22 Comments
I hear you OP, but in my region (northern Spain and Portugal) you would have to reeducate 99% of the population over 40. Especially in rural areas. It was freeing living abroad in Ireland because people would actually stare at me less, even though I was a foreigner. It’s a weird cultural thing 🤷♀️
catarina@kbin.socialto
News@lemmy.world•Shunned in computer age, cursive makes a comeback in California
1·2 years agoThanks for the explanation! That’s exactly what I was wondering about, especially after reading some more comments in this thread. Sounds like it is an unfortunate consequence of how cursive is taught :(
catarina@kbin.socialto
Unpopular Opinion@lemmy.world•If your country is one of those where the traffic is insane, and everyone just point-blank refuses to obey 75-100 percent of all signals and rules of the road, I don't respect your nation, at all.
151·2 years agoDownvoting not because it is unpopular - I actually agree with parts of it -, but because it’s an incoherent rant fueled by anger against some “undeveloped” country where magically everyone can fix engines with a piece of string. Big “hate the global south” vibes from this one.
I don’t know you or your mind, but from that, it sounds busy AF.
That’s not what a mindfulness practice is like at all. To be clear, I wasn’t referring to a dictionary definition of mindfulness, but to the Buddhist meditation kind. In mindfulness meditation you would be working to get to a completely different state, where you simply observe, instead of analyzing.
I could be projecting, and I apologize for that, but I see myself a little in what you described: I used to scan myself all the time, and think of things to fix and improve, dwell on what I did wrong and what I am going to do better tomorrow, think through many moral scenarios and arguments so I would act in a sound and correct way. That’s fine and very valuable.
It is also why mindfulness was hard for me to get into - because I couldn’t be inside my head like that all the time. It is almost the opposite of that. It’s hard to step aside from that torrent of thoughts, especially if you are an introvert and used to tapping into that rich inner world. Mindfulness meditation is training your mind to reach a sort of silent tranquility, a blank slate where you can draw your true intentions on and then maybe reach deeper insights. It helped a lot when I accepted that we are not entirely rational, even when we think we are acting purely on logical thoughts. We need to connect somehow to that latent emotional side, to recognize it more often. And this only clicked on my late twenties, until then I thought I could just think myself into any desired outcome (spoiler alert: it didn’t work).
I am sure there are many resources out there that explain this better than I can. My point is introspection != mindfulness.
That’s a common misconception about mindfulness that I fell - and sometimes still fall - for. It’s not about knowing a tool or framework, and using it when you think you need it. It is not debugging a one off. It is a practice. You do it as a routine, and it slowly shifts how you face the world and yourself. It’s not the answer we are looking for, especially in a crisis, it’s not a fix. It’s a change, it takes the rest of your life, and it’s not a linear system of inputs and outputs.
catarina@kbin.socialto
News@lemmy.world•Shunned in computer age, cursive makes a comeback in California
3·2 years agoDamn, that’s a terrible experience, I am truly sorry you went through all that. Those teachers are the dregs, fuck them.
catarina@kbin.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•Untangling Non-Linearity: How the Linked List Changed Everything
7·2 years agoCool article, I feel like I learned more about linked lists in a 5 minute read than over a few classes in college.
Plus, I love that it references Vera Molnar - hand executed algorithm art is not that widely known, and people always look at me as if I have two heads the first time I bring up the topic.
catarina@kbin.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•Japan crashes SLIM spacecraft upside-down on the moon and calls it a "success"
111·2 years agoIt would be beneficial for all here if you could learn to not take things so personally, and take in some fair criticism about this particular post. But please stick around, the topic of the article is definitely interesting, thanks for that!
catarina@kbin.socialto
News@lemmy.world•Shunned in computer age, cursive makes a comeback in California
73·2 years agoThis is so alien to me, do other Europeans struggle with cursive? Is it a geography or an age thing?
Personally, it feels like a natural way to write and link letters quickly. I think it’s taught in a backwards way, and a lot of people never develop their calligraphy skills because of that, but once you understand the point of cursive, it makes sense. And it’s one more way to express yourself. It can be as legible/ambiguous as you want to make it. You can add fancy ligatures, or keep it clean.
catarina@kbin.socialto
World News@lemmy.world•South Korea passes law banning dog meat trade
233·2 years agoNice misogyny you got there
catarina@kbin.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•If you live in the EU - you may also be faced with this Meta prompt. Info in text.
10·2 years agoI would love to ditch WhatsApp, but then I wouldn’t be in touch with my family half as much, and it would be a lot more difficult to get anything done.
I am in Spain where people simply assume you have WA, and the majority of small business use it extensively.
catarina@kbin.socialto
Green - An environmentalist community @lemmy.ml•Would You Rather Give Up Meat Or Flying For The Environment?
5·3 years agoYeah, but all the people taking multiple flights a year for weekend getaways aren’t solely the responsibility of the “corporations”, are they?
Or maybe, hear me out, he has enough time and money to dedicate to taking care of his body. This article is a super petty attack.




I thought it was a joke, and then saw the actual post on LinkedIn this morning. That place is something else.