Level Extreme platform
Subscription
Corporate profile
Products & Services
Support
Legal
Français
How to disconnect MTDLL - lnRelease?
Message
 
To
23/02/2005 21:52:02
Dragan Nedeljkovich
Now officially retired
Zrenjanin, Serbia
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Internet applications
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00988483
Message ID:
00989965
Views:
66
I hear/say make only general sense and sound of the supposed language, but often I catch myself inventing a word which I then can't understand :). And the word equally often doesn't belong to any particular language.

We [probably] use non-syllabic symbols for our "buss" comminications. Thoughts are more like a pulse. Not words. The symbols you are witnessing could be a leak (but I doubt it:-).

Understand, all of us on this board are writers. We write software. And to do that requires an ability to muster a transcendental state, on queue. Next time you turn on your computer, next time you settle down to some kick-a?? coding, check your breathing rate - check your state man!

Even today, when I open an instrument case - I dive right in - get meditational. Same with my `puter

The next time you "witness" your buss language - think about it - you have trained yourself, perhaps without a conscious "effort", to get transcendental at the drop of a dime.

The purpose of meditation is to transpose thought to body. The "language" you percieved are the contextual symbols of a meditative state!

The new words - maybe a nutrino from Arcturus slammed across an inner cortex synapse and knocked an electron off a receptor causing a cognitive mutation that resulted in either a conjugation of symbols or a "splitting" of symbol. Thus a "new word"! New words are okay - as writers we have license - so, err, ahhhhh mmmmm....aaaaahhhhh use or loose it!

You were spacing out man - plane and simple - admit it. It's a requirement for what we do!



>Our youngest daughter is just getting excited about understanding stuff in French (learning at school) and Japanese (as a hobby)... and she didn't speak a word of English when we came here.
Imagination is more important than knowledge
Previous
Next
Reply
Map
View

Click here to load this message in the networking platform