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Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Neil Warren's Shortform · 2024-04-01T19:18:09.962Z · LW · GW

I hate death metal. This is a great song!

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on So You Created a Sociopath - New Book Announcement! · 2024-04-01T19:00:45.079Z · LW · GW
Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on LessWrong's (first) album: I Have Been A Good Bing · 2024-04-01T14:09:46.971Z · LW · GW

It's good to see Scott Alexander being recognised not only for his influence on folk music, but his beats, as he moves rhythmically, forcefully into unstoppable Dance. He got the moves.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on LessWrong's (first) album: I Have Been A Good Bing · 2024-04-01T08:36:04.011Z · LW · GW

Inspired and inspiring. These tunes add another string to the Less Wrong bow. Catchy! (First favourites are The Road to Wisdom and The Litanies. [Profound stuff]Oh, and 'Thought that Faster'.)

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on General Thoughts on Secular Solstice · 2024-03-25T23:54:35.022Z · LW · GW

Yeah, I always want at least a run through the particular song's Chorus, in an 'All together, now!' way. Singing can , for many, enhance communal fun, and the joy of togetherness.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Making a Secular Solstice Songbook · 2024-01-28T03:02:14.036Z · LW · GW

Thanks!

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Making a Secular Solstice Songbook · 2024-01-24T01:14:13.096Z · LW · GW

Où?

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Gentleness and the artificial Other · 2024-01-03T02:30:36.094Z · LW · GW

Yeah, great examples, and thought provoking. I look forward to more...gentleness.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Most People Don't Realize We Have No Idea How Our AIs Work · 2023-12-26T12:51:35.839Z · LW · GW

I laughed when I read ' black box.' Us oldies who predominantly use Microsoft (Word and Excel) and Google Docs*, are mostly bewildered. by the very language of computer technology. For some, there is overwhelming fear because of ignorance. Regardless of MScs and PhDs, I know someone who refuses to consider the possibilities of AI, insisting that it is simply the means to amass data, perchance to extrapolate. It is, I think, worth educating even the old folk (me) whose ability to update is limited.

  • And maybe Zoom, and some Social Media.
Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Rationality outreach vs. rationality teaching · 2023-12-26T12:30:51.602Z · LW · GW

I agree that many of us outsiders would like to understand and utilise rationalist thinking. I did not, for example, notice the 'rationalist' take that ' AI will become Evil Vaguely Judeo-Christian God who Tortures Us in the Future'!

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Here's the exit. · 2023-12-17T23:56:44.367Z · LW · GW

This short post is astounding because it succinctly describes, and prescribes, how to pay attention, to become grounded when a smart and sensitive human could end up engulfed in doom. The post is insightful and helpful to any of us in search of clarity and coping.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Luck based medicine: my resentful story of becoming a medical miracle · 2023-12-17T22:35:52.603Z · LW · GW

This 'medical miracle' story engenders hope. To suffer a chronic illness and to have no tangible answers regarding (diagnosis for too many), treatment, or treatment that works, is disheartening, frustrating and draining. Here is a detailed account of one quest that, having exhausted the standard intellectual-medical approach, remarkably results in relief. This writer gets deeply into her specific experience, and the reminder that there is a case for exploring intuition, along with unlikely luck, is uplifting.  

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on In Defense of Parselmouths · 2023-12-16T12:40:59.549Z · LW · GW

I appreciate the clarity of your distinctions. Being surrounded daily by obfuscation and lies (eg the media, politicians, and narcissists) makes for difficulties. Good nurses, or injecting doctors, successfully use distraction and play to reduce the likelihood of pain. When presented by lies eg 'This won't hurt,' or '(Ignore the facts, ignore what your eyes/senses/insights tell you) Because I say it it is the truth,' it interests me that people do not, often in great numbers, question the lies being told to them. Personally I find being lied to particularly upsetting, and believe I ought to have grown out of this as an old person! I now think of myself as an aspiring Quaker, who in fact functions as a Parselmouth.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Counter-theses on Sleep · 2023-12-13T22:18:05.533Z · LW · GW

The references to research for the clarification and countering of assertions, made in a previous piece on sleep, allows for useful knowledge sharing. And the examples of the effects of sleep deprivation are mostly hilarious!

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Greyed Out Options · 2023-12-13T18:40:06.072Z · LW · GW

Simply by the author stating and exploring examples of 'greyed out options' one is reminded of possible choices, some of which may benefit the reader. Feeling stuck, fettered, having little control, direction, without meaning or purpose, struggling, or subject to ennui, or varying degrees of stress or anxiety, might be helped by considering physical/psychological, actionable changes in behaviour. Trying new stuff/things/ways of being, may be at the edges of one's thought or comfort zone; the reader is gently reminded to look. This writing gives me good pause; it encourages the act of reflecting on personal possibilities, and subsequent impetus to pursue something novel, (thereby challenging) which may be life enhancing.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on In memory of Louise Glück · 2023-10-15T05:56:34.452Z · LW · GW

Thank you for sharing your insights, and love of her poetry. Ignorant of her work I kept coming across her obituaries. Wiki provided an outline, you have provided a refreshing depth and clarity around her work for which I am grateful.

Glück, at a first glance, is generous with her thoughts

'Honor the words that enter and attach to your brain.'

'The unsaid, for me, exerts great power.'

'Birth, not death, is the hard loss.'

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Deconfusing Regret · 2023-09-16T14:06:31.799Z · LW · GW

I like this post because it is thoughtful and well expressed. Getting old leaves one very aware of one's errors which as you say can lead towards self knowledge so that change will, of necessity, take place. Regret is therefore a learning opportunity for me but to suffer from hindsight is not useful. I think to be informed by mistakes is as good as it gets. Whilst it is not always the case that I won't repeat a particular error, one hopes that one is learning! So, the option of regret, and how seriously to take oneself/one's past thoughts or actions, is useful.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on How to Support Someone Who is Struggling · 2023-03-12T15:57:43.166Z · LW · GW

Beautifully expressed. It is always reassuring to read stuff which agrees with one's understanding! My thoughts frequently veer between, 'I need to say something or watch while they fall deeper into that particular abyss,' and 'Say nothing. Trust. They will work this stuff out.' This post allows for pause, and for me to focus more on what humility looks like.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Singlethink · 2022-08-10T02:39:24.598Z · LW · GW

Based on this one comment I wonder whether you found a way to get round the uncomfortable public speaking thing. Whatever the case, your writing is refreshing, and interesting to read!

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on A Meditative Experience · 2022-04-02T23:34:31.974Z · LW · GW

Your detailed recall of the stages of thought, feelings and actions you observed in yourself is clearly recounted here. It seems that you were able to soothe yourself through focusing on being in the moment. The ability to detach from /notice what's going on around you and to choose 'red car, red car...' reminds me of my own attempts to focus on a basic meditation 'rising' and 'falling' of breaths, which is so challenging! It sounds like even recognising changes, for example to your visual acuity, you're still able to exist in the present moment - that relates, I think, to a meditative state, which engenders calm. Thanks for sharing your insights.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Replacing Karma with Good Heart Tokens (Worth $1!) · 2022-04-01T11:27:40.859Z · LW · GW

Any monetisation could add to the funds of an agreed /a couple of agreed just causes. This, as opposed to individual acquisition of Good Heart Tokens, seems Goodest to me:)

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Do a cost-benefit analysis of your technology usage · 2022-03-31T19:19:38.732Z · LW · GW

Thanks for reminding me of my small concern: time-wasting, specifically doom-scrolling on Twitter. I will listen to the book!

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on You have a place to stay in Sweden, should you need it. · 2022-02-27T22:56:47.821Z · LW · GW

Kindness is my favourite attribute. This is good to read!

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on 100 Tips for a Better Life · 2022-01-25T00:09:14.194Z · LW · GW

A great read, some wise and compassionate stuff: reaching such insights will have taken time. Comments will, no doubt, be interesting too! Thanks.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Teaching Street Crossing · 2022-01-17T18:36:07.640Z · LW · GW

The Google sheet CDP is really interesting: particularly keen to see the development of the sleep tab - sleep records/routines for the whole family could be fascinating over time.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Teaching Street Crossing · 2022-01-16T21:16:43.004Z · LW · GW

This sounds well thought out, useful teaching for your children. Most importantly, through observing your daughter's behaviour and attention, you could gauge how able Lily was to attend to/focus on traffic from both directions. The learner teaches you what's going on; teaching is mutual learning. This post also brings the retrospective horror of walking to school (as a primary aged child 6/7yrs) when the walk, three miles each way, involved crossing a main road. I did not know, (up until I reached twenty years old) that most people saw differently to me. Buses, cars, blackboards, TVs all were very blurry, I figured it was 'normal.' Turns out I was always extremely myopic (-10 currently) So, hopefully all children have great eye testing and great eyesight once they're able to understand the elements of street crossing!

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Long covid: probably worth avoiding—some considerations · 2022-01-16T20:57:32.528Z · LW · GW

Sure it is essential to differentiate between those who have been tested for COVID and that self-reporting which, in the absence of a test, is another information source. To repeat my experience of becoming ill in the time of COVID 19: I couldn't get a test in July 2020; I don't know whether it was COVID-19 that hit me like a speeding train. I still have cognitive difficulties, severe fatigue, continuous headaches, lack of taste and smell, and other new things which have gone wrong physically. I'm waiting for the latest results of brain/spine MRI; I'm without a diagnosis. My reading suggests M.E., encephalitis, Long COVID and possibly lots of things - continued testing thus far provides no answer. I've also learned about FND and can see how these symptoms could, in the absence of an actual biomarker, be put under that umbrella. To have one's symptoms acknowledged matters. Losing one's fundamental abilities to function is so devastating; reading that such symptom clusters are deemed psychosomatic seems, to the afflicted, unhelpful.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on What are some beautiful, rationalist artworks? · 2021-12-14T14:55:44.556Z · LW · GW

The film of this event is great too: 'Bogowie' director Łukasz Palkowski.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Listen to top LessWrong posts with The Nonlinear Library · 2021-10-19T13:51:48.153Z · LW · GW

This is great! To have posts so clearly read is helpful, so accessible to those of us for whom the auditory modality is stronger. Maybe specific posts, because of high interest/importance/significance/ could be read by a human, not necessarily the author, just because that adds interest.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Choice Writings of Dominic Cummings · 2021-10-16T20:31:22.664Z · LW · GW

I was responding to an assertion that the UK had done well in dealing with COVID because of the speed of vaccination roll out. The head of the UK's medicines regulator said that the authorisation for the COVID vaccine was actually permitted under EU law. I believe him.

It is the case that the UK has a very high rate of infection and deaths compared to other similar European countries. Calls for proven, effective mitigations (repeated by Independent Sage) eg mask-wearing, providing safe ventilation in schools and workplaces, and having a Test, Track and Trace system fit for purpose, have been ignored in the UK. 

I do not know about Germany's mitigations in any detail. I am aware of a much lower death and infection rate there (and in France, Italy and Spain) compared to the UK. 

I saw this in 2020: 
Germany improves ventilation to chase away Covid - BBC News

https://www.bbc.co.uk › news › world-europe-54599593

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Choice Writings of Dominic Cummings · 2021-10-15T21:43:05.682Z · LW · GW

In spite of one hearing that there are supply shortages everywhere, the shelves are filled with goods and there are no closed petrol stations in the rest of Europe. The UK really is doing worse, it's as though Brexit has been a supreme act of self-harm.

Lying about driving the length of the country and having days out when you allege you thought you had COVID..... Cummings was involved in making it illegal to move around the UK during a lockdown; this is intentional, and not trivial. Producing multiple stories about one's actions and baldly stating those lies again from the PM's garden to a TV crew, to the nation is inexcusable.

When people involved in government lie on TV and in the newspapers, and evidence appears so the liar changes their story, one learns a good deal from that person's actions.

In a position of power the liar, who has not been challenged by the journalists and is safe within the Tory enclave, may lie 'for complex reasons involving multiple parts.'

Cummings like any self-serving Tory ( some of whom have been given millions, others billions throughout the pandemic) remains untrustworthy. Even though he went to a lot of trouble to muddy the waters the fact remains, his words cannot be trusted.

Cummings says there were lies told and 'dirty tricks' used by Leave and Remain during the referendum. There is evidence of illegal activity and multitudinous untruths told by the Leave Campaigners, where is any evidence of Remain resorting to this?

Being given multiple platforms and outlets to speak truthfully and to admit he broke Lockdown rules, Cummings is a man who chose to stretch and alter his lying strategy. If caught out he has repeated the lying just changed the details. Cumming's behaviour is unconscionable.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Book Review: A Pattern Language by Christopher Alexander · 2021-10-15T12:10:14.246Z · LW · GW

I like the elements of both '3. Country Fingers' and '39. Housing Hill,' They sound cool; like they'd work well by allowing us to meet our biophilic needs, and optimise for separate spaces plus a communal hub. Thanks for sharing this delightfully opinionated read; ideas on how to build housing and encourage healthy communities seems vital.  

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Choice Writings of Dominic Cummings · 2021-10-15T09:09:19.746Z · LW · GW

Being first to roll out vaccines is not enough, other European countries have managed to keep more people alive, and created safe environments - mitigations such as masks and clean air being the norm. Covid cases yesterday 13th October, 2021.

France: 1,120 Spain: 1,277 Italy: 1,561 Germany: 4,872

UK: 40,224

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Choice Writings of Dominic Cummings · 2021-10-14T21:01:40.968Z · LW · GW

Thanks. Good point.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on Choice Writings of Dominic Cummings · 2021-10-14T17:27:17.600Z · LW · GW

Cummings and honesty...I have a real problem with this idea; Cummings presents as the archetypal, self-serving liar. The repetition of denial regarding one's words or behaviour, with frequent changes in the actual substance of that denial, does not make it true. Is Cumming's ability to obfuscate so exceptional?

I remain a Remainer (never thought Brexit a good idea, its popularity was largely dependent on misinformation and xenophobic rallying, combined with disadvantaged, ignored swathes of the least advantaged drawing attention to their plight by flexing a weakened muscle). 

Here in Northern Ireland one may still watch how the unfinished business of Brexit, in terms of the NI Protocol, sold by Cummings & his Conservative friends, is working out.  As in the rest of the UK, Brexit has been handled in such a way that there are serious shortages of workers (eg abattoir operators, careworkers, nurses, lorry drivers, fruit pickers etc the lists go on exacerbated by years of austerity and Tory rule) and goods; the decimation of freedom of movement means no more opportunities for ease of working/studying /research/expertise or collaboration with our EU neighbours, and there's also the matter of excessive import and export paperwork which has resulted in businesses going to the wall. All of these problems are a direct result of Brexit: all economic research predicted the deterioration of economic well-being and industrial growth, and yet such prospects were ridiculed as 'fear mongering' by Tories, specifically Cummings in his role as advisor to Johnson et al. 

When one considers Cumming's own behaviour, in both words and actions, as he sold the UK public the myth of 'Brexit benefits,' there appear to be multiple irregularities.* 

[*https://www.politico.eu/article/15-things-uk-vote-leave-promised-on-brexit-and-what-it-got/]

Nowhere more clearly can one see the truth of Cumming's character than through his own behaviour, and the subsequent manipulation, and obfuscation, he employs to ensure he remains unaccountable. 

In what has come to be known as 'The Scandal of Barnard Castle,' those things Cummings said he meant and did, have been reported in multiple different iterations by himself, and by his wife, 'Spectator' journalist and Commissioning Editor, Mary Wakefield. 

Instrumental in formulating Lockdown Rules, Cummings broke them along with his wife and then proceeded, over a protracted period, to tell various stories about their actions and how they were 'blameless.'

The UK media published an account of Cummings' first version of events regarding possibly contracting COVID and travelling from London to the North East of England thereby having broken Lockdown Rules. Cumming's wife then published a different account in 'The Spectator;' Cummings proceeded to hold a special press briefing providing yet another account at Downing Street's Rose Garden; his wife recorded a different version for BBC Radio 4. Most recently Cummings said via Twitter that the real reason for his behaviour was that he felt he and his family were not safe in London. Cummings wriggled as he lied, as he repeatedly failed to admit that he had broken Lockdown rules.

To attempt clarity: Cummings broke the very rules he helped put in place when UK citizens could not leave home for anything other than work, no visiting dying relatives, in Care Homes or hospitals. The formats in which he brazenly lied with the support of Johnson, and through manipulating the media, is deeply concerning as the facts of his misinformation have not been conveyed to the public via mainstream media. There appears to be no holding government officials or ministers to account, the more they say something the more 'true' it is.**

[**https://bylinetimes.com/2020/05/23/bearing-false-witness-how-mr-and-mrs-cummings-broke-the-ninth-commandment/]

Cummings has no interest in truth-telling. If one wilfully conjures stories in order to present one's own actions and intentions, over time, in the best light, one is simply a charlatan. Cummings wants to be seen as rigorous, rational and insightful, cognisant of that which matters to humanity at this moment in history. He attaches himself to those capable of rigour while he is capable only of unseemly politicking.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on The Thyroid Madness : Core Argument, Evidence, Probabilities and Predictions · 2021-08-21T20:19:31.304Z · LW · GW

Your explanation of the chronic tiredness as a 'stuck immune response' or inability to completely clear the virus is useful to consider.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on The Thyroid Madness : Core Argument, Evidence, Probabilities and Predictions · 2021-08-21T19:51:58.144Z · LW · GW

Thanks, again for your thoughts and experience. I had AZ first dose (April 2021), 12 hrs later back to severe headaches- like headaches experienced during unknown virus (August 2020) plus shaking from head to toe for under 3 hrs- I was fine within two days, just tired. As I continued to be extremely fatigued etc by time second AZ appointment came, given more info on rare blood clots, I did not take second AZ, but (another month later) had a Moderna and will take second Moderna. Given how ill I've been for a year I guessed that I'd be better with an Mrna as opposed to adenovirus vacc. First Moderna left me with a sore arm, slight sore throat and tired - none of the extreme pain & shaking of AZ. Maybe I'll react to the second Moderna...It seems to me that insights into ME/CFS and Long COVID, here in the UK, are few. I will read your posts & comments again, and look further into treatment for thyroid. Thanks, it is good to hear that you found a route to wellness.

Comment by Heron (jane-mccourt) on The Thyroid Madness : Core Argument, Evidence, Probabilities and Predictions · 2021-08-21T13:10:37.857Z · LW · GW

Hi, I just read your posts from 5 yrs ago. How is your health and might you have any more insights into discussed conditions? I'm one of those old women (described in your writing) am thought to maybe have Long COVID (no test August 2020 here in Northern Ireland) or 'post-viral with neurological overlay...' currently due to have brain/spinal MRIs. I really enjoyed your ideas especially stuff on thyroid etc I think I present as M.E./CFS and have no answers. All good wishes and thanks. (As thinking is tricky I mostly listen to books so if you have a recommendation, cool).