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The Section That Looks Official and Takes Up Space

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There's More Than Corn In, Indiana, United States
Half the time nobody really bothers to read this section of the page, but I figured that since I'm bored I would fill up part of my page with the parts of my life that are odd. Probably the weirdest thing about me is my abnormal neatness when it comes to grammar and handwriting. I can't stand not capitilizing all of my letters at the beginning of a sentence, and ending everything with the proper punctuation. I can't write fast, so my writing territories fail epicly. Sorry Miss Holmes. When I write fast I get mad because my handwriting isn't neat. I am the master of all procrastination, although I am trying to work on it. I am fluent in sarcasm, as is my fellow sensei of the art, Flynnstone. I would fill this space with normal things, but those are uninteresting, so that's where I will end this section.

Monday, April 28, 2008

10% of Our Brains

While watching the movie "Wedding Crashers" this weekend, I heard a quote that god me thinking. Owen Wilson said, "We only use ten percent of our brains". How is this possible. I know that our brain is a very complex thing, and that there are many different dimensions to it, but it doesn't seem possible that we are only using one tenth of it. Then I began brainstorming. What if we were able to maximize that capacity of our brains? How much smarter would even the smartest man in the world become if he was able to use the other nine tenths of his brain? It doesn't seem possible that we could survive in the world with this handicap, but yet humans are "the smartest organisms on the planet". How easily would we be able to solve even the most confusing problems in the world if we were able to use our brains more fully? Could we find cures for cancer, all types of the common cold, AIDS/HIV? I also find it amazing that there hasn't been extensive research conducted on this subject. How can anyone stand having such great knowledge at their disposal but not be able to use it? How much information is stored up there that we can't access. How do we know that there isn't millions of years of history encrypted within the crevices of our cranium? Perhaps it would be worth becoming a brain surgeon to find out. Chalk that one up for possible future occupations.

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