Currently listening to: the sound of my dad watching golf in the front room.
Multitasking: cooking breakfast for dinner (just letting the oven preheat) and being kind of ADD today, so that might change.
What have I done today?: I did like a fourth of a workout on my new bosu ball. Took my vitamins. Crushed like half a tub of cookie dough by myself. Took a rinse off shower. Watched an episode of Dexter
Current obsession: my knees. Surprise, another knee injury, but I'm just putting off surgery as long as I can at this point. I done messed them up the other day. But hey, A) Workman's comp, and B) my first day off in forever.
Where I'm blogging from: sitting precariously on the edge of my bed.
So I figured I would delve into some of my other interests with this post. Hopefully on the road to enlightenment of what the heck I should do with my life. So, on today's roster: Anatomy.
I love the human figure so much, it's a little strange. Just the movement of someone's body, and the workings underneath are so intricate and delicate yet entirely durable and strong I find it captivating. I know really well all of the bones, and much less so the muscles, tendons, ligaments, and such but from my anatomy books, they're beautifully connected.
I love little snippets of facts like this:
- You can actually die from a broken heart. It's called Stress Cardomyopathy.
- Hypopituarism is a disease that does not allow a person to feel love.
- Prosopagnosia is a psychological (but likely also neural) condition of not being able to recognize people's faces, even loved ones, and friends.
- Genghis Khan slept with so many women that about 1 in every 200 people today are related to him.
- Our skin communicates with our livers (as a recent study from the University of Southern Denmark discovered), which could help explain how skin diseases can affect the rest of the body.
- You can actually be allergic to water.
- The average human body contains enough bones to make an entire human skeleton (okay, sorry I was joking about that one).
The pattern of your heart beat changes to mimic the type of music you are listening to.
Seeing an image on tumblr of an x-ray of two people kissing and someone saying "it's beautiful because you can't tell if it's a man and woman, woman and woman, man and man, interracial, age, or anything. It is objectively romantic". And I can say but the mandible is more pronounced, and the supraorbital ridge is also larger, plus the shape of the cheek bones and everything together I can deduce race, age, gender. So the objectivity is not the beauty to me, but the scientific candor of juxtaposing bones, tissue, and matter to make something uniquely beautiful and human.
Gold's ratio is a ratio of the facial structures to define beauty. Define beauty. There is science, and biology, and chemistry, but math can demonstrate what we find beautiful in a sea of organic shapes.
To me, anatomy is a poetry of figures, and movement, and functions. Even when it is macabre, it is human. Feeling. Being.
I feel deep for the night, and fulfilled. :) MWAH! Besos <3