Man'o, I've walked long enough now that my calves have grown into young steers. The young seems to be happy down there and hasn't tried to go any higher but that damn steer part keeps trying to creep on up. I'll fight that hand and fist if I have to!
One of the reasons I seldom have anything new to type is because the high cost of auto juice keeps us pretty close to home. We are a pretty poor, jobless and parsimonious couple that hope not to run out of money before we run out of our own gas. We can pretty well track the cash but no way to tell about the other.
Even if we don't get around much I have oodles and gobs of memories to draw from. Yep, don't have a bad memory in my head. If it is a memory, it is of a thing past and dealt with in some fashion leaving me still here and happy so it can't be bad. Or can it?
I just know I have a lot of memories stored up there but for some reason I can't pull up many that might be of interest to you to type about. In truth, I have so much stored that it is a chore to sort anything out. Oodles and gobs probably make some sense to you now huh? Or it could be that a few of my 100 billion neurons are getting too old or over used to fire correctly.
http://health.howstuffworks.com/human-body/systems/nervous-system/human-memory.htm
In the past, many experts were fond of describing memory as a sort of tiny filing cabinet full of individual memory folders in which information is stored away. Others likened memory to a neural supercomputer wedged under the human scalp. But today, experts believe that memory is far more complex and elusive than that -- and that it is located not in one particular place in the brain but is instead a brain-wide process.
Our brains are made of approximately 100 billion nerve cells, called neurons. Neurons have the amazing ability to gather and transmit electrochemical signals -- they are something like the gates and wires in a computer.
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A retentive memory may be a good thing, but the ability to forget is the true token of greatness.. Elbert Hubbard
About Me
Thursday, December 30, 2010
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