miriam_e: from my drawing MoonGirl (Default)
[personal profile] miriam_e
I wasn't going to mention this here. I tend not to advertise my misfortunes. But it occurred to me that LiveJournal is a place where I should write about things of significance to me, and this is certainly an important event.

I'll start with a brief description, then talk more about what this means to me.

Last Wednesday I was operated upon to remove a tumor from my right salivary gland. It was benign, but growing very quickly so chances were that it "intended" to go malignant eventually. This is a very common kind of tumor that can grow benignly for years without presenting great danger, safely contained within the salivary gland, though it always has the risk of malignancy and once it crosses that threshold it can set up colonies anywhere else in the body... and, well, I prefer not to talk about that.

The operation was quick and effective. They took the grape-sized tumor out with about half my right salivary gland. The incision, while quite large (about 5 inches long) down the side of my neck in front of my ear to part way down my throat, will probably be fairly well hidden by the way I have my hair. One of the biggest (though fairly remote) risks of the surgery was possible damage to the facial nerve, but I escaped that completely. One slight hassle is that my right external ear is now almost completely numb. I don't know how much feeling I will regain there -- almost certainly not all of it. A disturbing fact is that this tumor has an annoying tendency to return. This seems pretty logical -- if a form of cancer is common it is because many of us are are routinely exposed to the cause. If someone develops it once then they have shown a sensitivity that is likely to do its nasty work again unless the cause is removed or lessened. Unfortunately, as far as I can tell, nobody seems to have any idea why this particular tumor appears where it does.

What has this meant to me?

Like most of us I know that cancer is incredibly common in our society, but had not really considered that it would collect me in its vast, impersonal statistics. I tend to sail on through momentous events fairly easily so it was a surprise to me that I became somewhat ruffled on finding I had this tumor. I thought I would just handle it and move on, like I do with pretty-much everything. I mean, it is no big deal, right? I found the tumor before it was life-threatening and it was removed quickly and effectively with minimal side-effects. But it caused me to call into question my life and what I am achieving and what I am not.

I haven't reached any firm conclusions yet, but so far I can see that I haven't used my potential as much as I should. I have been on this planet for a few months short of half a century and considering the talents I was lucky enough to develop with the kindness and encouragement from others I have fallen considerably short of where I should be.

Where should I be?

  • I am a passable artist. I should be making better use of that.
  • I have fairly good writing skills and I should be accomplishing more there.
  • I am able to articulate concepts and project them into people's minds in a way that few can. I should be using that to encourage more kids to learn.
  • I am a moderately good (though pretty slack) 3d artist, and should have achieved far more with that, especially in view of my ideas on VR fiction and how VR has potential to repair most of society's and the planet's ills.
  • I have an unusual breadth of knowledge because I compulsively learn almost randomly and almost constantly from a very wide range of interests. But this is not only good in that it exposes me to a plethora of stimuli, but bad in that I never really developed any ability to direct my interests, and in fact explicitly relinquished such control in favor of letting my attention wander free. My reasoning was that you can never know where important information can come from so it was best to leave myself open to as many sources as possible. I should be using this more to develop my other abilities -- drawing, writing, teaching, and VR -- by synthesising disparate facts into information that is denied others who specialise more narrowly.
So where does this lead me?

I don't know. I have to think on it more. I am tired and more than a bit sore just now.

Gonna have a nap to recharge.

Date: 2002-12-09 04:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] miriam-e.livejournal.com
Ahhh yes. That's right. I forgot you had mentioned it in a recent LJ piece. I don't have any experience with it, but it should be fairly easy to pick up how to use. It operates with other Adobe products... like the Adobe Premiere video editing software which came bundled with my video digitising card. I found it a terrible program; big, slow, fragile, crashing all the time, counter-intuitive. Many of the free video manipulation programs (like tmpgenc and VirtualDub) seem to be much more stable, faster, and easier to use.

It is strange isn't it that a lot of free software and file formats these days are turning out to be much better than their oftentimes expensive alternatives. Linux vs MSWindows, GIMP vs Photoshop, PNG vs GIF, tmpgenc and VirtualDub vs Premiere, etc...

Re:

Date: 2002-12-10 12:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] patchworkkid.livejournal.com
GIMP is better than PS? I must track this down...

Date: 2002-12-10 02:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] miriam-e.livejournal.com
The Gimp was originally a Linux-only product, but a version has recently been made for MSWindows. There isn't one for Mac yet... dunno how hard a port to OSX would be... it is supposed to be very Unix-like, though I have heard a lot of complaints from people that it isn't so... I am not a Mac person though so I really wouldn't know.

Read about The Gimp here http://www.gimp.org (http://www.gimp.org)
And the MSWindows port here http://www.gimp.org/win32 (http://www.gimp.org/win32)

If you get confused about all the possibilities for downloading and installing then check out http://www2.arnes.si/~sopjsimo/gimp (http://www2.arnes.si/~sopjsimo/gimp)
That makes it really easy. He has all you need (on the ugliest web page you will ever see) with a step-by-step set of instructions near the bottom of the page.

Oh, and while many Photoshop and PaintShopPro plugins will work with The Gimp, not all will. But you will hardly miss them because it comes with a plethora of extra capabilities of its own. The main thing to remember is that most operations (other than direct painting) are carried out by right-clicking on the image and choosing from the pop-up menu. There are hundreds of Gimp-specific plugins available from the homepage, and unlike commercial paint programs you can roll yer own plugins if you want.

Re:

Date: 2002-12-10 03:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] patchworkkid.livejournal.com
Fantastic. Thanks very much. :)

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miriam_e: from my drawing MoonGirl (Default)
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