harborshore: (smarterthanyou)
[personal profile] harborshore
Tagged by [livejournal.com profile] halflinen:

- List 7 habits/quirks/facts.
- Tag 7 people to do the same.
- Don't tag the person who tagged you or say that you tag 'whoever wants to do it'.




1. I can't sit on a desk chair like a normal person. I'm always curling up weirdly, sitting on one of my feet, kneeling on the seat, or tilting oddly. And I switch positions really, really often.

2. I read ridiculously fast. When I was a kid, other kids would think I was lying about reading as fast as I did, and so they'd make me read a page and tell them what it said. This is less about aptitude and more about diligent practice (or at least it's equal parts of both)--I was very bored in class in elementary school, so I'd leave a book open in my desk and tilt it open so I could read during class.

3. I own between 32 and 37 scarves. The uncertainty about the exact numbers is because I keep giving them away AND buying new ones. I also own about ten pairs of colorful/interestingly patterned/boringly monochrome knee socks. I have a scarves-and-socks problem.

4. When I have to go through painful medical/dental procedures, I recite "Lily, Rosemary, and the Jack of Hearts" and other super-long Dylan songs in my head.

5. A strand of my hair can hold 56 grams of weight. This is unusually strong, they told me at the Children's Museum (I believe I was 11 at the time). So I have Good Hair? Or something? (On the other hand, I have Troublesome Teeth.)

6. I'm bilingual. (I know, you're all shocked now.) It's even more apparent at the moment, because I get to do my coursework in English this semester, so the spoken patterns are coming back as well (they always recede a little the longer I'm in Sweden). ETA: I should clarify--this makes my bilingualism messier, not neater. It's harder to keep the languages separate when I'm using them in, uh, close proximity to one another.

7. I had a hearing problem until I was twelve, when I somehow grew in a way that tilted my skull differently and allowed the channels (?) in my ear to become more open. Or that's how it was explained to me, at least.



Oh, I'm supposed to tag people, am I? Um, very randomly (and only do it if you want to!): [livejournal.com profile] novembersmith, [livejournal.com profile] blindmouse, [livejournal.com profile] erraticonstilts, [livejournal.com profile] fleurdeliser, [livejournal.com profile] torakowalski, [livejournal.com profile] lordessrenegade and [livejournal.com profile] jubella.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-02-05 11:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kickingrad.livejournal.com
Me too, on the reading thing! People still test me now, it drives my flatmate mad. He refuses to believe that I can read that fast.

Also, sitting like a normal person is for normal people.

*high-five!* ♥

(no subject)

Date: 2010-02-05 11:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] blindmouse.livejournal.com
1. I can't sit on a desk chair like a normal person.

Ahaha, I actually make dress decisions in the morning based on whether I can get away with curling my knee up on the keyboard at work if I'm wearing a skirt.

"Lily, Rosemary, and the Jack of Hearts" and other super-long Dylan songs in my head.

I'm not sure I knew that was a Dylan song? I have a Joan Baez version somewhere - possibly on cassette - that was obsessed with for a little while as a teenager.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-02-06 12:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] desfinado.livejournal.com
Me to with #1!! When I was a student I don't think anyone noticed me constantly tucking one leg under or propping my feet up or sitting cross-legged, but then when I was a TA I kind of felt OCD because everyone is watching your every move! I also got told to stop doing it during a conference presentation, oops. But it is so hard to sit straiiiiiiiight! Do you do yoga? I always felt that was why I kept wanting to bend joints and stretch while sitting...

(no subject)

Date: 2010-02-06 12:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] impertinence.livejournal.com
you should pp of your scarves. o_o

(no subject)

Date: 2010-02-06 12:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] languisity.livejournal.com
i'm fidgety, too. usually i'll curl up in a chair with my knees to my chest if i can get away with it. if i can't do that, though, i just can't sit still at all.

i read insanely *slowly*, but that's also because i have a daydreaming problem. like, i'll drift off and think i'm still reading? but i'm not. yeah, i don't even know how that works.

also? socks *___*

(no subject)

Date: 2010-02-06 05:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] halflinen.livejournal.com
7. Oh, weird medical things you grow out of. I had epilepsy till I was 13, when I just "grew out of it". \o/ for us both dodging bullets!

(no subject)

Date: 2010-02-06 11:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jamjar.livejournal.com
1) I do have to think about it, when I'm eating, to sit like an actual grown-up and not with one leg tucked up, or kneeling on a chair. On my sofa, I had to move the cushion at the back because this way, it's more comfortable to curl up on and I can tuck my legs all the way on the seat without having to jostle [livejournal.com profile] birdsflying or move the pile of stuff next to me.

7) My little brother was the same. He was pretty deaf especially in one ear, and now it's not really noticeable at all.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-02-06 03:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] torakowalski.livejournal.com
Re 1. I'm exactly the same! Sitting upright with both feet on the floor feels really weird and uncomfortable. My desk at work is too low (or, rather, my chair is too high because I'm short) for me to be able to curl my legs under myself while sitting at the computer and I get so fidgety because my legs are in the wrong places!

(Also, you tagged me! *beams* No one ever tags me!)

(no subject)

Date: 2010-02-06 06:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wethepainted.livejournal.com
Sitting normally is for boring people!

Re #6: The ETA part rings true. I'm bilingual too, and at times it feels like the languages are so mixed in my head I can't communicate with either! And when you add to that the two other languages I'm studying, it gets truly frustrating.

(I just friended you because you seem very awesome and so I thought I should come say hi. Hi!)

(no subject)

Date: 2010-02-07 04:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nokomis305.livejournal.com
Scarves! They are so fun. I always end up just wearing them around the house in winter, though, because I don't want to take them off.

Also I am right there with you on sitting weird in chairs. I'm always fidgeting and folding my legs in weird ways, just because it drives me insane to sit normally in a chair.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-02-08 10:07 pm (UTC)
x_dark_siren_x: (Default)
From: [personal profile] x_dark_siren_x
My friend does that. She always sits weird in certain types of chairs - and when I say weird, I mean, imitative of L in Death Note. It's rather creepy how she manages it. :/ Me, I just like tucking my legs up under me, and can sit like that for hours. I feel so unspectactular now. /o\

Same friend is also an incredibly fast reader. I just to be, but I think I've slowed sown now. She's always telling me, "you read slooooow." But then, I read Harry Potter five in under twenty-four hours and even knowing me as the kid with her nose in a book - until it got ripped away from me, anyway (I used to do that thing with leaving the book on the table too - but the teachers would yell at me if it was open, because they knew I'd be reading it and not paying attention >.<) - no one believed me. I kept saying, but it's not even that long!

And I thought I had a lot of scarves. O.o I'm jealous.
From: [identity profile] bayleaf.livejournal.com
re: #7, from the (pretty spot-on) description, it sounds like a eustachian tube problem. There's three sections of the ear (outer, middle, and inner), and each has a slightly different function in the hearing process. The part of the ear you can see on the side of your head = the pinna, and it and your ear canal are to collect and funnel sound to your eardrum. The eardrum marks the start of the middle ear, which is an air-filled space w/ a series of 3 bones that act like a bridge across the gap. The purpose of the middle ear is impedance matching, which is to say overcome the difference in the way sound carries in air versus water. One side of the bony bridge (called the ossicular chain) is connected to the ear drum, the other to the oval window, which is the start of the inner ear. The inner ear is filled w/ fluid, and when a soundwave hits your eardrum and causes the ossicular chain to jiggle, it sets up a series of water waves in your inner ear. These waves make the ear send a signal to your brain saying you heard something.

If anything goes wrong in any of the three sections of the ear, you can have a hearing loss. These hearing losses fall into one of two categories: problems in the outer or middle ear mean sound isn't moved from one place to another like it's supposed to be; that's called conductive hearing loss. Problems in the inner ear result in an inability to detect sound and/or send a message to the brain when a sound is detected. That's called a sensory/neural or sensorineural hearing loss.

The middle ear is connected to the outside only by the Eustachian Tube. It's function is to equalize air pressure (which is why you hear a little 'pop' when you're driving up a mountain or in an airplane. The tube opened up and air rushed in or out to try to make the pressure behind your eardrum equal the pressure in front of it.) If, for whatever reason, the tube can't open, there is a pressure differential and the eardrum can't move efficiently, which can cause a hearing loss.

Although that kind of loss is generally mild, ET problems can also cause fluid to build up behind the eardrums, which causes a much more significant hearing loss. If the tube function improves, however, the problem goes away.

Er. Which is waaaaaaaaaaaaay more than you ever wanted to know about that. Um. Nice scarves?

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