Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

RE: WAPF conference 2005

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Hi Suze,

> I realized that for most of us, only a

> fraction of our personality comes out

> on the list - it was such a pleasure

> to have fuller interactions with some

> of our listmates.

Yes. And I'd like to add that I'm always struck by how much everyone really

is like their online personality whenever I meet them in person.

It was a great time meeting all of you. As said in another post -- it

was a joy to be in a place where it was possible to be more yourself than

you can usually be and to be able to be relaxed and comfortable with the

people around you at the same time. That was part of the reason that I came

back to the conference this year. Even though last year I knew no one I was

unable to forget the feeling of camaraderie at the Saturday night banquet in

particular. Eating great hunks of butter in front of other people who were

doing the same was a memorable experience.

So thanks to all who allowed me to be a part of the experience and I look

forward to more of the same next year. Hopefully will be bringing more

sausage. Or maybe by then he will have set up shop so we can all buy it from

him and make him a wealthy man...

Ron

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 11/16/05, RBJR <rbjr@...> wrote:

> Hi Suze,

>

> > I realized that for most of us, only a

> > fraction of our personality comes out

> > on the list - it was such a pleasure

> > to have fuller interactions with some

> > of our listmates.

>

> Yes. And I'd like to add that I'm always struck by how much everyone really

> is like their online personality whenever I meet them in person.

Yes when I was at the conference last year, I can't remember one

person I met whose personality was all that different from what I had

gleaned online, at least from those who posted regularly.

Where the surprise was, and always is, at least for me, is seeing that

personality matched with how they physically look and how they

actually sound. Many, perhaps most times, that IS a surprise, LOL.

I had already met Suze, and seen pics of so neither one of them

surprised me at the conference last year (although I surprised Chris

when he met me...hehehe). I have talked to Heidi on the phone and

several others on these lists that should I ever meet them the

surprise factor is already gone via their voice (cuz therir voice

sounded very different from what I had imagined).

I think sometimes when you interact with someone whose ideology is

radically opposed to yours and yet they can present it in a competent

and articulate way, one might be prone to draw certain conclusions

about how they might be in person or socially, but, IME, those are

usually always wrong, as I learned years ago in my active dabting days

with all sorts of other folks with whom I had profound disagreements.

So I rarely draw any ultimate conclusions along that line from web

interactions (or books or debates), where you can't even see that

person and have no idea as to their particular life setting or current

personal circumstances or personal social style.

> It was a great time meeting all of you. As said in another post -- it

> was a joy to be in a place where it was possible to be more yourself than

> you can usually be and to be able to be relaxed and comfortable with the

> people around you at the same time. That was part of the reason that I came

> back to the conference this year. Even though last year I knew no one I was

> unable to forget the feeling of camaraderie at the Saturday night banquet in

> particular.

You were there last year? Did you come by the WAPF table? That is

where I was working with Suze.

> Eating great hunks of butter in front of other people who were

> doing the same was a memorable experience.

Yeah reminds me of a Dr. Schulze training conference I was at where we

LOADED up on the garlic. There were bowls of garlic and ginger at

every table that we freely put on our salads (along with LOTS of

cayenne). Man it was great! I didn't realize how strong we smelled

until I left the conference early, smelled the super strong odor in

the elevator, and felt sorry for everyone else in the hotel, LOL.

> So thanks to all who allowed me to be a part of the experience and I look

> forward to more of the same next year. Hopefully will be bringing more

> sausage. Or maybe by then he will have set up shop so we can all buy it from

> him and make him a wealthy man...

You know that really isn't a bad idea. Perhaps could train

someone else to make his style of sausage even if he can't personally

devote the time to it.

--

" It is no crime to be ignorant of economics,

which is, after all, a specialized discipline

and one that most people consider to be a

'dismal science.' But it is totally irresponsible

to have a loud and vociferous opinion on

economic subjects while remaining in this

state of ignorance. "

-- Murray Rothbard

Link to comment
Share on other sites

-

>You know that really isn't a bad idea. Perhaps could train

>someone else to make his style of sausage even if he can't personally

>devote the time to it.

My style? I have not invented a " new style " , composite or otherwise

that is set within a distinct tradition as apart from " this " method

or " that " method of sausage-making. On the contrary, I hope to free

the world from clinging to styles, recipes or cookbooks. Either you

understand or you don't, and that is that. There is no mystery about

it. My sausage production methods are simple, direct and

non-classical. A sausage maker who prepares exclusively to a set

recipe is losing his freedom. He is actually becoming a slave to a

choice recipe and feels that the recipe is the real thing! But

sausage is anything and everything, and sausage is nothing. Empty

your mind, be formless. Shapeless, like sausage which has not yet

been stuffed into a casing. If you put sausage in a loaf pan, it

becomes the loaf pan. You put sausage into a casing and it becomes

the casing. You put it in a patty mould and it becomes the patty. A

good sausage maker can never be fixed in a routine... each moment

requires a sensitive mind that is constantly changing and constantly

adapting. In sum, my style is the style of making sausage without

making sausage, and therefore I cannot possibly train anyone in my

" style " or attempt to start a sausage-making business, because to do

so would be to imprison myself in standardized plastic packaging and

freeze my sausage preparation technique into an eternal, stagnant moment.

-

P.S. Apologies to those of you who aren't Bruce Lee fans and think

I've gone off my nut.

P.P.S. I have a feeling that this should've been about half as long,

but I've got to make a mad dash for the subway.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...