Getting Tired of Beautiful and Special Things

I don’t know about you, but I can get tired of even the most beautiful and special things. I think this is probably true for most people.

I’ve lived in beautiful places like Boulder and Vail in Colorado, both of which I appreciated less over time. I’ve taken truly special photos, put them on my phone as the background, and gotten tired of them. I’ve made awesome art I loved and grew less fond of it, and seen amazing, historically important art in museums that started to bore me over time. I’ve listened to great music too much and cared for it less and less. You get the drift.

This is why I think differently when I see houses by the beach, or in the mountains, or some other amazing place. I’ve realized, yes, it would be great to live there for a while, but I would not want to live there for the rest of my life, or even for too many months or years. So I would not want to pay the high premiums people pay for houses in those places! For the same reasons, I avoid collecting expensive art, as I would get tired of it so quickly.

This line of thinking also probably implies I would get tired of being wealthy!

The thoughts in this post are yet more arguments for variety. And when you think about variety for a while, you’ll probably realize what you want is sustainable variety. At least that’s what I realized. This means finding ways of living over weeks, and months, and years, that give you variety you don’t get tired of! I don’t want kinds of variety that are like beautiful and special things that I get tired of. I want varieties of variety, and I want that to be sustainable, so I stay engaged and have the potential to keep being engaged. I think probably one of the best ways to get sustainable variety is to also pursue sustainable proximities. I think the two go together. Although that’s another topic, for now, here’s more on what I call the sustainable proximities approach.

If some of this rings true, you might be a bit of a variety person. Check out a project I started called varietypeople.org, where anyone can post their own thoughts, wishes and experiences, comment on the posts of others, and share ideas, events, resources and opportunities for other variety people. You might want to join us.

Variety Log

Today: Was an extra on a TV show shooting on location in Marina del Rey. Played a commercial fisherman. Saw pelicans and seagulls and crabs and fish and sea lions. Saw yachts and tugboats and fishing boats. We wrapped around 4:30 PM. Took nap in car. Then went for a run around the marina. At sunset. Ran 2.66 miles. Discovered a new place to run and new running paths. Heard sea lions barking. Saw orange full moon rising above the marina. Still no health insurance. Still poor as dirt. But I didn’t live like it today.

Double-Blind Science and Health

(r] davidloughry.com

Regarding how science on people’s health is done: Someday, we’ll probably look back and laugh at how we thought randomized, double-blind studies of one drug or procedure could tell us things with much certainty, when we begin to better model how many things are interrelated.

However, such research has probably been a good place to start. It has probably helped many situations, and probably hurt some. Indeed, where else would we have started? There were limits to our ProxAwareness (join ProxThink to find out more).

~ Proxri Deal: As you find our relationship rewarding, proxri with the proximity in mind. ~