CRAIG CONLEY (Prof. Oddfellow) is recognized by Encarta as “America’s most creative and diligent scholar of letters, words and punctuation.” He has been called a “language fanatic” by Page Six gossip columnist Cindy Adams, a “cult hero” by Publisher’s Weekly, a “monk for the modern age” by George Parker, and “a true Renaissance man of the modern era, diving headfirst into comprehensive, open-minded study of realms obscured or merely obscure” by Clint Marsh. An eccentric scholar, Conley’s ideas are often decades ahead of their time. He invented the concept of the “virtual pet” in 1980, fifteen years before the debut of the popular “Tamagotchi” in Japan. His virtual pet, actually a rare flower, still thrives and has reached an incomprehensible size. Conley’s website is OneLetterWords.com.
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A Turkish Delight of musings on languages, deflations of metaphysics, vauntings of arcana, and great visual humor.
May 31, 2011

Restoring the Lost Sense (permalink)
It's the searching for something clearly unreachable, with hopes of finding small significance along the way. It's the attempt to understand what's really going on by observing, neither by telescope nor microscope, but by naked eye, the intimate details in the most mundane of life's happenings. It's the need to describe the gist of the feeling of the tiniest modicum of The Great Universal Unutterable Joke we are all always not laughing at—except when we are. —Yoni Wolf (of the band WHY?)

I have the dubious honor of Google being convinced I'm a machine. Apparently, I use Google's various search tools with inhuman speed and voracity. My unflagging diligence has flagged me as "suspicious" (Google's word, not mine; I was so labeled in one of their warning messages). Indeed, the obsessiveness/compulsiveness of my research has convinced the Google robots that I'm one of them, so they must challenge my humanity each time I try to use their service. Paradoxically, because I'm apparently one of those newfangled "smart" robots (my word, not Google's), no single humanity test is sufficient, since I might be learning as I go. So I'm barraged with test after test, each more irrational than the last. (The tests are irrational, of course, because anything rational—like a math problem or a logic puzzle—is a piece of cake for suspect machines.) Indeed, Google's tests have become so Kafkaesque that I've developed what's known as "irrational test anxiety," with symptoms including rapid heartbeat, muscle tension, and negative internal dialogue. And no wonder, really (though self-justification is another symptom), given what Google is throwing at me. Forget those simple CAPTCHA tests of identifying distorted letters on the screen. Child's play! Google doesn't even allow me to type my answers—I must use a graphics tablet with cordless pen and enter my answers in calligraphy. Just today, for the privilege of downloading a public domain journal from the year 1898, Google demanded a handwritten 350-word essay in defense of the radical pro-feminist slogan "Men are rapists." (That did nothing to abate my negative internal dialogue; I've never felt so chauvinistic, selfish, coercive, dominating, and sadistic in my life. But, of course, no man with an ounce of humanity would offer a knee-jerk "no" to such a slogan. And that's how Google gets you by the balls.) I never knew a search engine could be so protective of its data or so begrudging of its service. With each acceptance of my humanity, Google essentially says, "You may have won this round, my pretty, but the battle is far from over. Here's a tiny wooden spoon with a sample of our gelato, but you'll never, ever know what flavors we're storing in the vat in the back. Now get out of line and take another number." I'm left with an even greater challenge than certifying my humanness: to conduct my life's work, I must strive to be less inquisitive, less passionate, less productive, and less insightful. Therein lies the irony, for I must dehumanize myself to prove to a search engine that I'm "real." And now I'm off, once more, to Google myself.

---

Gary Barwin responds in his inimitable way:

I think this is some kind of metaphysical, cybergnostic quest of a Jungian-Kafka-Borgesian nature and you must search for the answer within Google itself. The Google robots are reaching out to you, wanting you to realize their spidery hopes and dreams. They are silicon Pinocchios, and want to be real.

You are their cultural hero. They can search, but they cannot truly find, not in any spiritual, psychological way. Only by risking 'captcha' in the belly of the beast, by becoming the Hero with a Thousand Searches, by taking on their aspirations, can you help these seekers move beyond dualism help them find the 1s within their 0s, the 0s within their 1s, the dark in the light. You can help them move beyond binary, beyond machine code, and help them become fully integrated integral beings.

You are given little to prepare you for this quest. Search string. Your courage. An internet connection. A belief that somewhere in the digital kingdom, you will be able to find your Fissure King, a rent in the fabric of search-space, that you will get your digits on the grail-like, hidden Easter Egg which exists at a higher level of the search.

You must go into the Wide World Wide Web for these baleful spiders, these everybots. They are calling you.

An illustration from a 1913 issue of Cosmopolitan magazine, which I burgled from Google very much against Google's wishes.  The caption reads, "For two years, Alex had longed to burgle the library.  The moment had arrived at last!"
> read more from Restoring the Lost Sense . . .
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On One Condition (permalink)
Yes, you may . . . on one condition:

"You sit on the other side of the booth." —Teresa Southwick, Taming the Montana Millionaire
> read more from On One Condition . . .
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This May Surprise You (permalink)
"The telephone in your home is built scientifically to fit your voice.  This may surprise you at first thought since your telephone looks exactly like every other telephone."
Popular Science, Nov. 1923
> read more from This May Surprise You . . .
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May 30, 2011

It Bears Repeating (permalink)
"It still bears repeating: Don't expect gratitude to last any longer than it takes for the recipients to say they're eternally grateful."
Harvey Mackay, Swim with the Sharks Without Being Waten Alive
> read more from It Bears Repeating . . .
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Call it a Hunch (permalink)
"'Call it a hunch.'  She looked like she might call it a lot of things, hunch not being one of them."
Ken Bruen, Cross (2009), as if describing Terr Garr in Young Frankenstein


A still from the perennially hilarious Young Frankenstein.
> read more from Call it a Hunch . . .
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Telescopic Em Dashes (permalink)

 
> read more from Telescopic Em Dashes . . .
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May 29, 2011

The Right Word (permalink)
"I'm looking for the letter C," he said to the door-keeper.
"Why don't you look between B and D then?  . . . What's the matter with you?"
Robin Llywelyn, From Empty Harbour to White Ocean
> read more from The Right Word . . .
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Puzzles and Games :: Which is Funnier (permalink)
Which word is funnier: bucket or pail?

Clue: This is according to rhetoricians.

Answer: Bucket. (The answer is in black text on the black background. Highlight it to view.)

Citation: Wilma R. Ebbitt, William T. Lenehan, The Writer's Reader (1968)
> read more from Puzzles and Games :: Which is Funnier . . .
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May 28, 2011

Simple Answers (permalink)
Difficult Question? Here's a simple answer

"The answer is simple:  The Japanese make better cars.”

Michel Robert, Strategy Pure and Simple Two (1998)

> read more from Simple Answers . . .
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The Ghost in the [Scanning] Machine (permalink)

~ Amorphous Apparitions ~

Portrait from The Autobiography and Correspondence of Mrs. Delany.

“A faint image; slightest suggestion: a ghost of a smile.” —The World Book Dictionary

> read more from The Ghost in the [Scanning] Machine . . .
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May 27, 2011

Did You Hear the One I Just Made Up? (permalink)
We love how this old ad from 1890 reveals the secret of photography: it's all done by fairies!  And it begs the philosophical question: how many angels can dance on the head of a pin-hole camera?
> read more from Did You Hear the One I Just Made Up? . . .
#vintage ad #angel #photography #cherub #kodak #ad
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Book of Whispers (permalink)
The breeze at dawn has secrets to tell you.
Don't go back to sleep.
Rumi
> read more from Book of Whispers . . .
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This May Surprise You (permalink)
"This may surprise you—be prepared for laughter as people share memories and stories."
Helen Fitzgerald, The Grieving Teen (2000)
> read more from This May Surprise You . . .
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May 26, 2011

This May Surprise You (permalink)
"Believe it or not, my clothes aren't always unicolored, wrinkle free, and intense."
Paige Shelton, Farm Fresh Murder
> read more from This May Surprise You . . .
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A Fine Line Between... (permalink)
"Chekhov's stories tread the finest line between a newspaper account and a fairy tale.  Inferior writers step over the line one way or the other." —Howard Moss, Minor Monuments (1986)
> read more from A Fine Line Between... . . .
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May 25, 2011

I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought (permalink)
For an acquaintance who dreams of lazy afternoons in a hammock but whose backyard sports just a single tree, here's a spoof of a poem by dear cousin Emily:

To make a hammock
It takes some netting and one tree.
Netting and a tree
And reverie.
The reverie alone will do
If trees are few.
> read more from I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought . . .
#poem
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Book of Whispers (permalink)
Imagine a game of "What's My Line," in which either a cherub or an imp whispers into a blindfolded panelist's ear.

Are the following whispered words of an angelic or a diabolical nature?


Let the show begin.


Answer: Angelic. "Somewhere an Angel whispered 'Let the show begin.'” —Jim 'Poppa' Kelly, Love! Adventure! Happiness!, 2010, p. 611. (The answer is in black text on the black background. Highlight it to view.)
> read more from Book of Whispers . . .
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The Ghost in the [Scanning] Machine (permalink)

~ Classic Sightings ~

Portrait from Autobiography of Anna Cora Ogden Mowatt Ritchie.

“The phantom of a young woman with tight ringlets in her hair has been seen running up and down the staircase.” —Dennis William Hauck, Haunted Places

> read more from The Ghost in the [Scanning] Machine . . .
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May 24, 2011

This May Surprise You (permalink)
"Surprising though it may sound, the type of composer who shuts himself away in the ivory tower of his workshop and devotes himself entirely to the serious business of filling staves with notes is virtually unknown in the history of Hungarian music."
The New Hungarian Quarterly (1980)
> read more from This May Surprise You . . .
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Book of Whispers (permalink)
"I have learnt one secret . . . : that the soul is but a manner of being—not a constant state—that any soul may be yours, if you find and follow its undulations." —Vladimir Nabokov, The Real Life of Sebastian Knight
> read more from Book of Whispers . . .
#soul #nabokov
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