Monday, December 14, 2020

The effect of alcohol on the mind

 Sometime in July, or was it August, I resolved to quit drinking alcohol, or wine. At the start of the pandemic, convinced that there would be a run on alcohol stores, I had bought several bottles of alcohol thinking that society would devolve into bartering any day now. In those early days I had any number of ideas of what would happen, and so did many others (and some of the strange people over on the "PandemicPreps" subreddit, prepping to this day for a second toilet paper run that has not happened). Funny enough, I didn't actually drink this alcohol as had been my wont previously. I even bought a bottle of St Germain which, strictly speaking, was not kosher certified, thinking any port in a storm (heheh). But once my illness began, my concerned parents took all the booze home (with my approval), and thus began my teetotalism.

At first, it was unwilling, and difficult. I lacked the impulse control to avoid wine; in fact one of my Shabbat rituals, besides for the traditional rushing to do all the preparation in the last 45 minutes, was to buy a bottle of wine at HEB and drink it all in one swoop (typically), or half on Friday night, half on Saturday night. Inured as I was to the effects of alcohol, having a miserably high tolerance, this was just fine. I was also at a stage in my life where chips went well with alcohol, especially high-alcohol double- or triple-IPAs, and that pairing dogged me throughout the days, as did the ensuing weight gain.

In August I decided, let's make it till the end of the month without wine. It wasn't easy, but I made it till Rosh Hashanah before drinking wine with my parents. Sukkot was an exception, and then I kept at it, drinking maybe two bottles of wine and perhaps a couple of beers in between then and now. And most unusually, as I noticed when I drank two cans of beer this past Thursday, between July and December I'd lost the taste for chips. To get high, or low, I'd much rather have a bag of oranges and some bubbly water. My alcohol tolerance dropped, a thing I had not believed possible, and I stopped taking a detour through the chips & candy aisle at the groceries, daring my consciousness to resist while my eyes devoured the puffy bags of salty goodness. 

Tonight I had a bottle of stout, one of those very high-alcohol versions that always comes out during the "holiday" time of year, of Goose Island brewery fame, or whatever. I posted a comment on Facebook that someone else found rude and decided to correct me on it. Thus it was that I re-discovered my tendency to make combinations of words that may seem positive but really aren't. I became despondent upon realizing how I'd spent time drinking and eating raspberry iced pops while watching the last season of Bojack Horseman instead of reading up on red-team infrastructure for a meeting tomorrow. And it wasn't until I went for an extremely belated walk that I realized that the beer had an effect that was very unusual: it made me sad. In years past, if I wanted to be sad (such as after yet another breakup with someone I thought I knew only through the voices of the phone speaker), I'd drink cups and cups of water, fearing the levity that would come with beer. But now, it seems, from a happy drunk I've become a sad drunk, as if the beer shattered an illusion of a life I had constructed, free of the worries of a pandemic-full world, where deaths and egotism wreak havoc on the psyche of anyone who isn't materialist or selfish. Those things did not concern me; I had a bike, a garden, friends, work, books. But the beer had other plans. Who knows what troubles might lie in the murky depths of a chocolate stout?


Tuesday, December 08, 2020

My Goals

 Sometime between now and 2026, assuming there eventually is a functional coronavirus vaccine and sufficient numbers of people take it, I will move to a different city that has a higher population of young Jews with a similar religious outlook on life. Hopefully the K-shaped economic change will not significantly affect this city, such that I will be able to have a social life without feeling like I need to carry protection with me or feeling like I really missed the boat on my goals in life. I will find someone who is meant for me and marry her. At that point we will decide to either continue living in the city for a time, or move to a different city or region to escape the encroaching effects of climate change or simply be able to experience snow. Most likely, life's burdens will continue to become more difficult, but at least it will be a little easier to bear with someone else and I can forget the intervening 8+ years during which my other part-time job was dating. I can then prioritize my career only to the extent that I can be there for my kids. Since the long-term outlook for the earth and humanity is grim (regardless of the little bubble that corporate environments like to pretend their employees hold), growing up with my kids will be the slim consoling factor, even with the small nagging thought that having kids in an overpopulated world is a fundamentally selfish idea. Giving of myself will always be more important than the extent to which I can make KPMG more money. With this attitude, I should be a manager in no time, capable of executing on engagements within my area of expertise, working on proposals, and developing new service offerings to keep KPMG offerings up to date.

Friday, June 26, 2020

Projects / Things to Learn

To be updated continuously:

AWS Cloud Practitioner Study and Exam - Do the labs, use the tips and resources provided through corporate email threads
Update HFLA website (1/2)
Update my web app testing methodology with new approach
Read PDF reports on PC saved for future learning
Read useful corporate email threads.
Watch Active Directory Awesome videos from colleague
Raspberry Pi 4 - into new Plex server
Try out cool OSINT tools
Ham Exam
Learn to use Baofeng radios
Learn how to use Graylog
Build bug-out bag and keep in car
Dehydrator and learn how to dehydrate fruits (& Beef jerky!)
Dedicate time to learn sign language
Wifi monitoring - make something useful out of it
Try to go around Nessus ToS
Nessus or OpenVas on Raspberry Pi 4.
Implement LibreTime (https://github.com/LibreTime/libretime) to FINALLY create my little radio station broadcasting day-of-time-appropriate Indian classical music (props to @noid from Toorcamp) - try it on the Pi 4




Wednesday, February 26, 2020

A gripe with dating sites

There are sometimes thoughts I have that are too long for Facebook, or can't be made into concise statements for people's attention span on Facebook, or can't be memed easily. Or, more likely, can't be neutralized and made devoid of emotional content such that it can gather neutral likes while at the same time not revealing anything shocking about yourself.

For instance, this thought I had about SawYouAtSinai. After reading part of The Second Sex, I've been able to redefine a lot of what I encounter, in life and Judaism, in terms of the psychoanalytic perspective of Simone de Beauvoir. After seeing a gushing report from a matchmaker about a prospective match, and realizing that the "About Her" section could easily have been generated by a bot trained on dating profiles, I tried to find easy ways to generate dating profiles online. The examples from a five minute search were sparse, other than a hilarious fill-in-the-blank sample that generated a profile with an odd fixation on skinny feet. Thus, if I'm to generate a dating profile creator, it would take some serious work.

My thoughts then drifted to how SawYouAtSinai, a dating site initially developed sometime around 2005 if not earlier, forces anyone completing the profile into a certain paradigm. Most, if not all, modern dating sites have you fill out some broad categories based on religion and sex, upload some pictures, where you went to school, and a personal paragraph. Nothing gendered here. Whereas SawYouAtSinai requests a series of multiple choice questions in addition, with no "Other" options, e.g. for Kosher the options are "Always", "At Home", and "At Home & I Eat Dairy in non-kosher restaurants" (says it all). These differ depending on gender and thus force the person answering them to conform to pre-defined, unchanging ideas.

Here are the female-specific questions that are visible on a public profile (as distinct from questions visible only to the matchmaker):

Head covering when married: Fully, Partially, etc.
Dress: Skirts, Skirts+Pants, etc.

And the male-specific ones:

Head covering: Kippa
Do you want to meet someone who will cover her hair (Required)
Frequency of Torah study (Required)


My beef was with head covering originally, but then I realized that maybe because this is a matchmaking site, meant for more religious people, it makes assumptions that religious people might find relevant. However I have a problem with head coverings - shouldn't that be for both genders? Why do you have to make the head covering question mandatory? Why can't I have a head covering question for after marriage as well? Resolved: Yosef will change from a small kippa to a bukharian kippa after marriage so that the women won't swoon at the sight of his beautiful hair. When you flip the tables on the whole shaitel thing it seems a lot weirder. But this can easily turn into yet another one of my gripes about shaitels in general, so let's not do that.

P.S. They should add a question just for the month of Adar where guys can list whether they will wear Skirts in addition to Pants.



Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Topics

Wifi + Graylog Analysis
Dreaming
Raspberry Pi 4 - Plex build out (again)
Enviro+ Pi input into Graylog
Minimizing ESXI datastores into one machine.
Thoughts on getting a new computer
Thoughts on "The Second Sex"
Thoughts on collapse (especially w/rt echo chambers)
     Especially thoughts on how it would play out on everything we do day to day.
     Law of unintended consequences
     What is dystopia? Can we look at the world from an outside viewpoint
That article about technical debt + Peter Zaihan + Collapse


Thoughts on Dating

Over the break I went on an Olami trip to Spain, Portugal, and Gibraltar, with a group of people 30+ strong from Houston, Chicago, and Detroit. I'd known some of the Houston group previously, some less than others. Among the many thoughts I had during the trip, several on the human relationship side have stood out. This was easily the best trip of my life. Going in I was apprehensive of traveling in a group this big and indeed the first time that Israeli music blared in a public square in Lisbon I noped out of the big group circle and sing-along in make-believe search for bathrooms. But I grew to really trust the people on the trip and especially the Houston crew, who early on claimed the rear of the bus and stuck around through the remainder of the trip's long bus rides. My laughter flowed free and it's safe to say that I haven't been this happy in a long time.

After the trip, the sore throat that I'd contracted from someone else on the trip (which is how it goes, one person has something and pretty soon some other people do too) became bronchitis and I picked up pink eye in the airport (as I had to travel to and from San Francisco the week after my return). This has left me in a monastic state of silence, unable to speak for more than a few minutes without coughing and subsequent unmanageable strain on my vocal cords. At a time when I'm bursting to relate my thoughts and impressions to my parents who got all sorts of pictures on our shared WhatsApp group, I'm struck dumb by the inevitable post-international-travel sickness.

And so I turn to a blogpost instead, to note the following big change that has crystallized since the trip. Namely, I gained a lot of self-confidence from the trip. In addition to doing a few selfies with the Houston group, I also was able to ask other people on the group to take pictures of me in front of famous tourist landmarks, and some of the fear I'd long borne towards pictures of myself (and my fat-face-a stupenda) melted away. It's become easier for me to look at pictures of myself and not shy away and say I look like crap (although there's no denying that I look a whole a lot better without glasses).



Another thing is that I started reconsidering moving to NYC, as I'd suddenly realized that all my friends and social life are here in Houston. Why move to NYC if all the friends I'd just made on this trip are still staying in Houston? That leaves just one reason to move to NYC: dating. And here's the other thing. After a recent long-distance relationship, where both parties were putting effort into the long-distance deal, I suddenly realized that long distance is a lot harder than I thought and that I'm no longer willing to do long distance dating. Even without my travel to San Francisco, the realization that I can't just go over and visit someone I'm seeing and spend time with her, alone or in a group at an event, without making it a big deal, bothers me a lot, and I'm no longer willing to do that, for anyone really. Phone conversations seriously lack the human, in-person element and I personally can't substitute phone conversations for that. This is why I will start going to Jewston and Moishe House events, even if they are on Shabbos, because I've reached the point in my life where I'd rather compromise on my previously-held beliefs on Jewish observance than pass up on opportunities to meet Jewish women where they are, rather than trust that God will provide in a city that is not friendly to "observant" single young Jewish professionals.