In college, I took four creative writing courses and absolutely loved them. The first of those classes allowed us to write whatever we liked, and after dabbling in short stories for a week, I switched over to writing poetry and never really looked back. More specifically, I almost exclusively wrote in specific forms and meters instead of free verse (which I referenced in last week's post). There was something about trying to be creative within a defined (and often rigid) structure that gave me a much, much greater sense of satisfaction and accomplishment than the free verse variety. In fact, I had trouble writing not in meter. I tried once, and my professor happily pointed out that I slipped into a rhythm a few times in my lines. Why did I like it writing in meter so much? I believe it all boils down to the degree of difficulty.
Allow me to back up a little before I move forward. It's not that I don't enjoy well-written free verse. I do, and I even just read an entire book written in free verse that was fascinating. It's called Sharp Teeth by Toby Barlow, it's about modern day werewolf creatures, and it's like nothing you've ever read. That format worked surprisingly well with the subject matter, and I enjoyed it thoroughly. I personally don't like writing in free verse though, and here's where I'll sound a little snobby: I feel like anyone can write crappy free verse, but it still takes skill and planning to write crappy meter. In fact, really crappy meter turns into crappy free verse, if that makes sense. Which brings us back to the degree of difficulty thing: it wasn't enough for me to think of a topic and want to write a poem; I needed the extra level of fitting it into specific metric feet to get my full sense of accomplishment.
And that's a problem I see in my life at times when it comes to creative projects. The higher I set the degree of difficulty, the lower my chance of success will be. Some of you longtime readers might recall the humble beginnings of this blog. I wrote one day, then another, and then another. From that point, I decided that I had to do it every single workday (including holidays) or it didn't count for some reason. It took me a year to finally switch to once a week, and that came with some hefty internal struggling - even though I was almost completely out of topics.
I'm reading a book by Nick Hornby right now in which he talks about the various books he's purchased and read on a monthly basis. It's taken from a series of articles he wrote for The Believer, and I'm enjoying it quite a bit. In May of 2008, he started and stopped a few books, but "nothing took." "At least I have some fun facts at my disposal," he wrote. "Did you know that if you wrote out the human genome one letter per millimeter, the text would be as long as the river Danube?" He doesn't specifically say which book that was from, but of course I was not aware of that. Still, I didn't feel comfortable saying that the thing he learned that day would be the thing I learned on this day.
What struck me most about that fact was that it posed two more questions for me.
First, the human genome is written in letters? I'd never pictured it or tried to, but I doubt I would've pictured letters. And second, I guess the Danube is long, but I have zero idea whether it's five or five hundred miles (or kilometers, I suppose).
So I looked stuff up. According to Wikipedia, the human genome "occupies a total of just over 3 billion DNA base pairs." That sounds like a lot. A sample base pair looks like this:
ATCGAT
TAGCTA
I'm now remembering Adenine, Guanine, and other -ines from science classes back in high school, thereby making sense of this whole thing. "One letter at a time" for each base pair with over 3 billion base pairs...I'm guessing that's a damn long river. Let's check.
Sticking with Wikipedia for ease, it tells me that the Danube is "the longest river in the European Union and Europe's second longest river after the Volga." How long is that? 1,771 miles or 2,850 kilometers. Wow, that's a long river. How does that compare with the Nile? Well that one is 4,132 miles or 6,650 kilometers, aka "long ass long." So what did I learn today?
You would need to write out the human genome letter by letter about 2.33 times to make it the length of the Nile.
And to doubly prove my point (and ensure that this is the longest UOPTA post of all time), here is January 5th:
I was standing in my boss's office with another co-worker today when my boss turned on his computer. His desktop is a pretty picture of bright stars and what I'm assuming are galaxies. Out of nowhere, my co-worker said, "Ah, the Peacock Galaxy." "What?" my boss asked, and the co-worker pointed out a bright part on the screen that looked a little like a peacock if you squint and/or are extremely high. "Is there really a Peacock Galaxy?" I asked. "Eh, I'm just making stuff up. But I think that's it," he replied. "Hold on," I said, "either you made it up or it really exists." "It exists in my mind," he said, rendering himself completely useless.
I went to Wikipedia and found zero entries for "Peacock Galaxy." When I just tried "Peacock," it took me to a page for a star called Alpha Pavonis in the constellation Pavo. "Alpha Pavonis was named Peacock, for obvious reasons," it told me. Uh, not obvious to me. So I dug around some more online and found another site the spelled out that "pavo" means "peacock" in Latin. "Wait a gosh darn second," I said to myself, "Pavo just means 'turkey' in Spanish."
I consulted an online English to Spanish (and vice versa) dictionary to get more information. As I knew but confirmed, "duck" is the similar "pato" and "turkey" comes out as "pavo." What does "peacock" tell me in Spanish? "Pavo real." Yeah, enough of those fake turkeys already. I'm talking to you, vegans.
I went to find out more about peacocks to see how close they were as a species to turkeys. I guess they look alike, come to think of it, once you get past the showy colors. As it turns out, a turkey is in a different genus than the peacock, but that's not my learned item of the day. Nope; it's this:
While a male is called a peacock, a female is technically a peahen. Together, their group is amusingly called peafowl.
3 comments:
Your mind is like a runaway train. How do you ever get to sleep at night? You are certainly UNEC !
Do you ever just sit quietly at not think about things? Just taking in the silence and relaxing is a real joy. I'd tell you to go get a massage and relax, but you'd likely return with a post about "Oils, Scents and Moodscapes."
Hmmm...
Maybe the Pork Hater was just really against government spending?
It's possible.
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