CRAIG CONLEY (Prof. Oddfellow) is recognized by Encarta as “America’s most creative and diligent scholar of letters, words and punctuation.” He has been called a “language fanatic” by Page Six gossip columnist Cindy Adams, a “cult hero” by Publisher’s Weekly, a “monk for the modern age” by George Parker, and “a true Renaissance man of the modern era, diving headfirst into comprehensive, open-minded study of realms obscured or merely obscure” by Clint Marsh. An eccentric scholar, Conley’s ideas are often decades ahead of their time. He invented the concept of the “virtual pet” in 1980, fifteen years before the debut of the popular “Tamagotchi” in Japan. His virtual pet, actually a rare flower, still thrives and has reached an incomprehensible size. Conley’s website is OneLetterWords.com.
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Found 98 posts tagged ‘list’


I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – January 20, 2020 (permalink)

The reason for everything is …

  • there in front of you, wearing that cunning little yachting cap maybe.
  • is never the logical conclusion.
  • to point us to the meaning.
  • we’re all mortal.
  • what it generates.
  • luck.
  • consciousness.
  • that there is no reason for anything.
  • nothing more than the proverbial tip of the iceberg.
  • that it seemed like a good idea at the time.
[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – January 13, 2020 (permalink)

The only advice is …

  • to let them alone; they will not change.
  • practice controlling it, but keep it secret.
  • eat and drink well, dance, and be merry.
  • have nothing to do with it.
  • to take one step at a time.
  • try to observe with an unobstructed horizon.
  • be prepared for the worst by avoiding it.
  • that it's okay to be confused, and find some peace in your confusion.
  • to follow you heart.
  • that less is more.
  • to stay loose.
  • to use common sense.
  • to emigrate.
  • when you find the right stuff, buy in multiples.
  • to let it be a little bit.
  • to set aside everything you know (at least temporarily).
  • go to bed immediately and stay there several days.
  • to take no advice, to follow your own instincts, to use your own reason, to come to your own conclusions. 
[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#advice #list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – December 27, 2019 (permalink)

The only thing left is …

  • to get back to your bedroom.
  • to untie the knot into a circle.
  • to ask the moon for her compassion.
  • the hard part.
  • to enjoy the day.
  • for the lawyers to clean up the details.
  • to fly higher.
  • to ask if it’s worth it.
  • a bunch of unanswered questions.
  • to connect all the wires and turn it on.
  • a little moody calm for a respite.
  • surgical intervention.
  • proving everything is independent.
  • telepathy.
  • to travel to Ararat.
  • floating information.
  • to liquidate and save what can be saved.
  • the blood, some meat and the remains of magical power.
  • a light.
  • to proceed upon established lines.
  • the space that includes the viewer.
  • the unspeakable, the pure.
  • some of their names.
[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – December 4, 2019 (permalink)

The best thing in the world is:

  • to get enough sleep.
  • to lie on a soft rug before a fire.
  • to laugh with a friend.
  • to be got from books. 
  • flying at full speed from pursuit.
  • to cultivate one's own garden.
  • to be who you are.
  • love.
  • to have the heart of a child.
  • individual freedom.
  • to watch the day being born.
  • work.
  • a pile of nuts as high as a hill.
  • to be self-forgetful.
  • to be useful.
  • laughter.
  • to play music.
  • to live; most people just exist.
  • to know somebody needs you.
  • in some cases, the very worst.
  • always in danger of extinction.

[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – November 29, 2019 (permalink)

We tend to forget:

  • that even standing upright is a learned skill
  • how much we are connected
  • the middle items
  • the sublime
  • the liberating power of fantasies
  • even those hardwon lessons that could help us solve recurring problems
  • that a longheld assumption does not thereby become a fact
  • things that do not fit our own personal expectations
  • that the brain is not the mind
  • how big an order of magnitude really is
  • a great deal of what is said almost as soon as we hear it
  • disagreeable experiences
  • negative feedback about ourselvess
  • how real the imaginary is to children
  • about “us”
  • that dogs are not people
  • what we want to forget
  • ourselves, forget we are in a theatre
  • that the body understands the world in unique ways
  • that it hasn't always been like this
  • about those people that we do not know
  • many things we knew when we were in the spirit world
  • who we are
[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#forgotten #list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – October 3, 2019 (permalink)

We may never understand …

  • what happened and why.
  • why dogs whine on car rides when they're the ones who begged to go.
  • the senseless violence.
  • if love just happens or is planned.
  • the ultimate action of this or that agent.
  • the religious and philosophical significance of the Japanese flowering cherries.
  • all the details.
  • the principle of universal love.
  • the private logic behind Judy's behavior.
  • how we will be changed by our long travels.
  • why others treat us unfairly.
  • how we arrived at our present condition.
  • the deeper story, yet we know there is one.
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – September 21, 2019 (permalink)

The truth is that …

  • even granite changes over time.
  • if it were easy, everyone would do it.
  • life itself is music.
  • I was never that girl in the hallway.
  • learning to laugh at yourself can help you.
  • there is no "right" age for being who you are.
  • there are so few who know where Burma is.
  • a journey is an extension of the human personality.
  • our body is in many ways like a robot.
  • none of us has reached that exalted position of perfection.
  • mind and matter are complementary to each other.
  • sometimes what is supposed to be observable is lost in our focus on the flame.
  • there is nothing noble in being superior to somebody else.
  • your death would be something to fear only if you could survive it.
  • teams often create negative synergy.
  • it is okay for one or a few people to pee in a river, as the river's ecosystem can cope with that amount of pollution quite easily.
  • the horse may be thirsty but not have the will to drink.
  • everyone who trusted Jesus in the first century A.D. died.
  • no one has a clue.
  • love is the greatest thing upon this earth.
  • there never is just one truth.

[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]

> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#truth #list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – September 11, 2019 (permalink)

The best thing to do right now is to:

  • get yourself a cookie
  • proceed antisystematically and aphoristically, or lyrically, or musically
  • keep together
  • turn to page 8 and get an idea
  • lay low for a bit and let the heat die down
  • hold the nerves in, keep cool and let the fish take the line for a run
  • bite the bullet and show up
  • rest for a little bit
  • keep quiet
  • get away from the monkeys
  • sit down, relax, have some lunch
  • go for a swim
  • build a fort
  • give these people a chance
  • get out there as quickly as possible
  • just watch what he does
  • learn how to cope on your own

[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]

> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#advice #survival #what to do #list
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Precursors – September 8, 2019 (permalink)

There's a precursor to the TV show phenomenon of "Jumping the Shark" (of course named after the Season 5 episode of Happy Days in which Fonzie waterskied over a shark and thus outed the writers as having run out of ideas).  It's what we might call "Unchaining the Monkey."  Of the classic sitcoms we revisit, Bewitched lasted the very longest before throwing in the towel amd ushering in a chimp.  That show made it deep into Season 5 before giving up.  The worst offender, though the one show with the very best excuse, was Gilligan's Island, which made it only two episodes before going ape.  But at least the jungle island setting made the casting seem less desperate.  Frankly, the most painful offender of this bunch is Hogan's Heroes: a chimp supposedly having escaped from a zoo nearby the German prisoner of war camp is dressed up and becomes history's most reliable courier of the Underground resistance movement.  It's tearfully unfunny.

Classic sitcoms in order of ability to delay the monkey:

  1. Gilligan's Island - "Voodoo Something to Me," Season 1, Episode 3
  2. The Addams Family - "Morticia Joins the Ladies League," Season 1, Episode 6
  3. The Munsters - "Come Back, Little Googie," Season 1, Episode 25
  4. Green Acres - "Horse, What Horse?" Season 1, Episode 29
  5. I Dream of Jeannie - "Fly Me to the Moon," Season 3, Episode 1
  6. Hogan's Heroes - "Monkey Business," Season 3, Episode 29
  7. The Beverly Hillbillies - "The Gorilla," Season 5, Episode 6
  8. Bewitched - "Going Ape," Season 5, Episode 22
Honorable mention: Monkee Davy Jones appeared on The Brady Bunch in "Getting Davy Jones" (Season 3, Episode 12).  This honorable mention notwithstanding, we respectfully disgree with TVTropes that "Everything's Better with Monkeys."
> read more from Precursors . . .
#monkey #chimp #television #tvland #class sitcoms #going ape #list
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Indubitably (?) – September 2, 2019 (permalink)

Nothing can go wrong if:

  • there are backup systems.
  • you don't get caught.
  • you do it right.
  • the eternal truths are stated loudly.
  • you figure things out carefully.
  • gold is near.
  • you keep your head and listen to me.
  • fate is on your side.
  • you don't panic.
  • you devise a strategy.
  • we all stick together.
  • you just treat X and Y as constants.
  • we operate strictly according to plan.
  • you practice what you have learned.
  • your harness is sound.
  • these people don't get elected.
  • everything goes right.
  • you just return to Paradise Island.

 

[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]

> read more from Indubitably (?) . . .
#list
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Indubitably (?) – August 6, 2019 (permalink)

There is comfort in …

  • having a good bed in a fireproof hotel.
  • reflecting that it might have been worse.
  • knowing we are not alone in our anonymity.
  • a mother's caress.
  • a stranger.
  • the strength of love.
  • the knowledge that evil is but temporary.
  • the perception that we are all in this chaos together.
  • using a procedure that gives definitive answers from confusing data.
  • business as usual.
  • the womb.
  • being with those with whom we have spent pleasant and meaningful days.
  • knowing the impermanence of all these conditions.
  • church light, which is star light incarnate.
  • the knowledge that the other shore has already been reached.
  • a circumscribed life.
  • numbers.
  • a hermetic, tidy account of the past, and comfort too in a measured and recognizable voice, leading us through those long ago and lost intricacies.
[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]
> read more from Indubitably (?) . . .
#comfort #list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – August 2, 2019 (permalink)

The thing to do is …

  • once you've bloomed, hold on. 
  • change the course.
  • keep up your spirits in spite of everybody and everything.
  • get rid of the poison while it is still only on the surface.
  • just laugh it off.
  • begin while the infestation is slight.
  • go back to doing what you do best.
  • accept this madness of yours as a basic fact.
  • keep occupied.
  • face the worst with serenity.
  • heed them both.
  • be forever losing yourself in the enjoyment of embracing life.
  • find a house and wait for Santa.
  • play this game simply for the pleasure of playing it.
  • accept this fact and try to utilize it.
  • start before it's too late.
  • the thing that can be done.

[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]

> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – July 16, 2019 (permalink)

We can get through this if we:

  • don't pass out
  • stay in the moment
  • tough out the next few days
  • tell ourselves we can
  • stay here and focus
  • don't panic
  • take risks
  • trust each other enough
  • do it together
  • talk to each other
  • keep our minds clear
  • put up a united front
  • follow simple precautions
  • rely on the Lord
  • vote on an amendment
  • keep it light
  • hold onto our patience
  • stand up for one another
  • can forgive
  • are determined to grow
  • don't start screaming

[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]

> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#survival #getting through #list
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Indubitably (?) – July 9, 2019 (permalink)

The only way to survive is to:

  • write and read big fat books
  • make fun of yourself
  • pretend you're not there
  • embrace the madness
  • run forward as fast as you can go
  • be merciless
  • work until the wee hours of the morning
  • set yourself in perpetual opposition to the system
  • gird your heart
  • fight back
  • become strong
  • prevent
  • join the side that's winning
  • live underground and eat worms
  • muster the aid of magic
  • laugh
  • hunker down
  • become more efficient
  • be one step ahead
  • keep moving
  • stay resilient in your suffering
  • be totally self-seeking
  • stick together
  • climb out of the ring
  • have a protest strategy from day one
  • remove the brain implant
  • actually be optimistic and make the best of everything
  • stay connected

[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]

> read more from Indubitably (?) . . .
#survival #list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – July 5, 2019 (permalink)

Sometimes a full moon ...
  • casts eerie shadows across tombstones.
  • can create a rainbow at night.
  • appears twice in the same month.
  • peeks around the clouds.
  • moves through the earth's shadow.
  • looks so big and bright and magical.
  • dances through gaps in dark clouds.
  • makes all the difference in the world.
[Tidbits gathered through the course of our research.  See the remarkable collection, entitled Bullet Lists.]
Illustration from Full Moon by P. G. Wodehouse, 1947.
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#moon #list
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This May Surprise You – June 6, 2019 (permalink)

A dozen things talking skulls have said:
"There is no use for you to cry, for you are with me now, and you must begin to clean me."
—told by storyteller White Sun, whose grandfather was the medicine-man of the Kitkehahki (The Pawnee Mythology, collected by George Dorsey, 1906).
"Is it just today or yesterday that I have been here?"
—a Nigerian Yoruba story (African Folktales in the New World by William Bascom, 1992).
"I was dreaming. ...I dreamt that I threw my own body down. I dreamt that I was bounding about, merely a skull."
Yana Texts by Edward Sapir, 1910
"There is as much fire beneath our feet and heads as the sky is distant from the earth."
The Book of the Elders: Sayings of the Desert Fathers, translated by John Wortley, 2012
"Shall I remain a skull for ever, or shall I take my own true form?"
—"The Two Sisters," A Staircase of Stories chosen by Louey Chisholm and Amy Steedman, 1920
"Why do you spurn me? I once was living, I now am rolling in the dust; your fate will be like mine."
Smoke by Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev, 1883
"Tongue brought me here; tongue will bring you here too."
Readers of the Quilt by Joanne Dowdy, 2005
"I have fully enjoyed valuable treasures in my life time—and even after I died."
The skull spoke. Muffled. Sepulchral. "Trick or treat!"
Hunter's Orange by William Dieter, 1984
"Foolishness killed me, and cleverness has killed you."
Research in African Literatures, 1977
"We ask you to look with the eyes of your soul and to engage with the essential. Regaining your luminous nature is a possibility today for all who dare to take the leap."
The Maya End Times by Patricia Mercier, 2008
"I am here to destroy all human beings."
Curse of the Crystal Skull by Drac Von Stoller, 2012
---
Our illustration is from Washington University's 1922 yearbook.
> read more from This May Surprise You . . .
#vintage illustration #skull #occult #vintage yearbook #yearbook #thirteen #list
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Restoring the Lost Sense – February 25, 2019 (permalink)

There are many "evil trinities," including:
  • treachery, cruelty, and superstition (the evil trinity of the Spaniard, in Sir Ferdinando Gorges and His Province of Maine by James Phinney Baxter, 1890)
  • alcohol, ignorance, and immorality (the evil trinity of backwoods settlements, in Colliers, 1915)
  • cowardice, impatience, and self-love (the evil trinity of a fatal course, in Bonnie Kate by Mrs. De Courcy Laffan, 1894)
  • lice, impure food, and foul water (the "evil trinity of chicken raising," in American Poultry Advocate, 1914)
  • lust of the flesh, lust of the eye, and pride of life (the evil trinity of corruption, in The American National Preacher, 1843)
  • servitude, destitition, and ignorance (the "evil trinity of political debasement," in Eagle Pass by Cora Montgomery, 1852)
  • the boss, the speculator, and the soulless corporation (the evil trinity of public park sanitation, in Popular Science Monthly, 1899)
  • appetite in the drunkard, greed in the liquor maker and seller, and indifference in church members (the evil trinity of temperance work, in Minutes of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States, 1892)
  • the world, the flesh, and the Devil (the evil trinity of the soul's enemies in Christian theology)
  • infidelity, anti-Christianity, and Spiritism (the evil trinity of unclean spirits in American Messianic Fellowship Monthly, 1917)
  • ignorance, superstition, and prejudice (the evil trinity that plots human misery, in The School News and Practical Educator, 1904)
Pictured is the trinity of absolute evil from Christian Iconography by Adolphe Napoléon Didron, 1886.
[Inexplicable images from generations ago invite us to restore the lost sense of immediacy.  We follow the founder of the Theater of Spontaneity, Jacob Moreno, who proposed stringing together "now and then flashes" to unfetter illusion and let imagination run free.  The images we have collected for this series came at a tremendous price, which we explained previously.]
> read more from Restoring the Lost Sense . . .
#vintage illustration #devil #evil #demonic #evil trinity #absolute evil #list
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought – November 5, 2018 (permalink)

Scanning a 1939 volume of Daily Tar Heel, we noticed references to:
  • pink elephants
  • golden fleece
  • ghost writing
  • cindermen
  • phantoms
  • mermen
  • wolfmen
  • wolves
  • devils
  • grail
  • imps

Alas, they turned out to be sports-related, mostly.  Oh, there was even an animated snowman named "'Frosty' Snow, Jr."

> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#list
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Restoring the Lost Sense – August 31, 2018 (permalink)

If you land a hand and realize it's just a baby's, or it's not in season, here are tips for throwing it back:
1. Don't wear it out by playing with it too much before you land it.
2. Leave it in the water and never touch it with dry hands.
3. Gently remove the hook so as to prevent crushing.
4. Cut the line if the hook won't come out.
5. Don't actually throw it back, as that may cause harm or even kill it.  If it is in shock from being caught, gently move it back and forth in the water to help the fingers to spread.
Our illustration is from Lustige Blätter, 1908.
[Inexplicable images from generations ago invite us to restore the lost sense of immediacy.  We follow the founder of the Theater of Spontaneity, Jacob Moreno, who proposed stringing together "now and then flashes" to unfetter illusion and let imagination run free.  The images we have collected for this series came at a tremendous price, which we explained previously.]
> read more from Restoring the Lost Sense . . .
#vintage illustration #fishing #severed hand #list
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This May Surprise You – May 1, 2018 (permalink)

Books are alive and have souls.  We found these proofs:

"Undoubtedly books have souls" (Joseph Jewell Barton).

"Literature … is alive—not in a vague complementary sense, but alive tenaciously" (E. M. Forster).

"Only an honest book can live" (John Burroughs).

"Literature is alive.  I am literature; it's not merely dead authors with beards.  It's alive" (Azouz Begag).

"Words have souls, and books have souls, and books, indeed, contain the most valuable essence of human souls" (The Open Court, 1894).

It's been said that "it's an author's passion, whatever its form … that makes a pulse beat in the printed page and keeps a book alive through its readers long after the writer is dust" ("The Book" by Barbara W. Tuchman).

It's been said that "the jumping out of planes, car chases and evil people in general is what I think keeps a book alive" (Scorpia, in a book review).

It's been said that "richness and impact characterize the lasting works" so that fifty years after their first appearance they still grip the human mind, immersing it in a rich created world.  (Kathryn Cave.)

It's been said that "It is the revelation that keeps a book alive to the reader" (Adrianne, "The Book and the Real World").

It's been said that references to famous quotations, events, and artworks is what keeps a book alive (Christchurch City Libraries).

It's been said that "It's the critical culture that keeps a book alive" (Yamini Deenadayalan).

It's been said that "it's word of mouth that really keeps a book alive" (Laura Lam).

It's been said that "What keeps a book alive is future books talking about it" (Tom Vanderbilt , "Why Is Literary Fame So Unpredictable?").

It's been said that "What keeps a book alive is not the judgment of critics, not the label of 'classic' attached to it in school-rooms, but the unaffected delight it continues to give to the hearts of men" (H. W. Boynton, "Reading New Books").

It's been said that "it is teaching that keeps a book alive" (Nicholas Birns).

It's been said that "It is only the good opinion of the few that keeps a book alive" (Max Beerbohm).

It has been said that it is the "calling for fresh copies of it after the old copies are worn out" that keeps a book alive (Leon Henry Vincent, The Bibliotaph).

It's been said that "humor that survives from other days" keeps a book alive beyond its own generation (Ladies' Home Journal).

It's been said that "credibility among [the author's] scientific peers" is what keeps a book alive in the minds of readers (Cheryl Knott).

It's been said that "a popular adaptation keeps a book alive" (Thomas S. Hischak).

Previously, we saw that the moment a work is published it appears in another world (either heavenly or hellish.  Bad books are tormented in Hell.)

> read more from This May Surprise You . . .
#books #living books #literature #living culture #books have souls #list
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