Originally posted by MrGongGong
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"Tired teenagers' lessons to start after lunch"
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The main reason for my lack of participation in Alpha Anon is that my late-rising tends to render other people inactive, making demands on their patience, before I can drag myself out of bed at some time just before what others might call lunchitme, having retired there at 3am. Breakfast for me is usually about 1pm.
I cannot think that only teenagers are wired to this pattern. Though I was always before time when going out to work, holidays always made way for the pattern to recur, and retirement has returned me to the out-of-sync day big time.
In any event, they tell me that it is rarely light before ten in the morning.
The phone rarely rings after 11pm. Such bliss.
Don
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OTOH http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-27286872
Everyone must be different, but I find that I wake earlier as the mornings get lighter, currently about 6am. I get up then and go to bed early - as our former PM Sunny Jim once said: 'All good people should be in bed by 10pm'It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Reading my diaries from my schooldays, I am amazed at how much we managed to cram into a single day. I did well at everything at school, apart from passing exams.
Re HG's suggested book - I've already written it and it has been widely read in electronic form - around 250 pages including illustrations/photos.
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As some of you may recall, I am a 'believer' in something called Myers-Briggs personality typing, aka 'the MBTI': QV via Google, but beware of simplified (dumbed-down) versions!
This gives considerable support to the notion that, as far as rising-times are concerned, the world really is divided into Larks and Owls. The former of course tend to be up early, they do their best work in the mornings and often manage to leave work at 5 o'clock. In MBTI these people will more often than not have their decision-making function extraverted and are called 'judgers'/ Js . The owls naturally tend to be the late raisers, do their best work in a rush at the end of the day, just as the Js are going home, and will have spent the time before the last-minute rush taking in more information, doing more research, before reaching any conclusions and decisions. In MBTI they are called 'perceivers'/ Ps and their extraverted function is their info-gathering one. There are actually roundabout equal numbers of each, though society very markedly 'expects' - for some stupid reason - everyone to be a J
I'm one of the Ps, my wife one of the Js. At uni she was up writing essays at 6am where sometimes I wasn't up till after lunch. I would find myself writing my essay at 3am on the day of the tutorial and would resolve to start work earlier next week. Result: much more background reading, deeper thinking, a much better essay...but still finished at 3am of the day of the tutorial Somehow I seemed to need the same pressure to force an essay with conclusions out!
Our mutual friends were worried that if we got married we'd never actually spend any time together, but hey we ignored them and got hitched. Of course, paid employment forced me into slightly more standard habits, but the predisposition - all the evidence is that it is genetic - never went away. What a relief it was to find that it wasn't something really 'wrong' with me
Later in life the removal of the 8.30 to 5 prescribed working day has afforded me a great deal of relief and I'm quite sure, for my employer, better results and less personal stress, even on occasion something akin to 'job satisfaction'
Incidentally, research indicates that performing classical musicians tend to be Ps, but composers tend more to J...though I can think of plenty of the latter I'd bet were Ps. Prime candidate Percy Grainger - never sure when a work was finished, always up for making another arrangement, always returning to ideas from years before, tons of works/arrangements left in unfinished sketch form, much to the 'delight' of later editors
I rests me case...
NB pedants, please allow me the spelling 'extraverted' instead of the o-version. Jung, the originator of the ideas on personality later refined by Briggs/ Briggs-Myers, was a good classicist and knew that the Latin opposite of intro- is extrA-! MBTI has retained it, bless it.Last edited by LeMartinPecheur; 16-05-14, 20:39.I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Don Petter
Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostI'm one of the Ps, my wife one of the Js. At uni she was up writing essays at 6am where sometimes I wasn't up till after lunch. I would find myself writing my essay at 3am on the day of the tutorial.
Did you not, perhaps, meet, at the international date line?
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Originally posted by jean View PostWhy wouldn't we? The o-version is just wrong.
Extrovert may be "wrong" in the etymological sense, but not in the general linguistic sense, surely?
If one wishes to stick with the etymologically indicated form, that might be considered a form of pedantry but not an eccentricity. I wouldn't 'correct' anyone, no matter which form they used. Which may be considered either extreme pedantry or not pedantry at all. I think.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View Post... Ps... Js.
...paid employment forced me into slightly more standard habits, but the predisposition - all the evidence is that it is genetic - never went away. What a relief it was to find that it wasn't something really 'wrong' with me
Later in life the removal of the 8.30 to 5 prescribed working day has afforded me a great deal of relief and I'm quite sure, for my employer, better results and less personal stress, even on occasion something akin to 'job satisfaction'
All very interesting LMP and I find myself very much of your stripe... I had the great good fortune of starting my legal career with another P who was rarely at the office before 10 but worked later, and I was able to fall in step (plus the nature of the work was/is such that things rarely happened, and clients didn't need attention, until the afternoon). Apart from personal body clock issues, the ability to do stress-relieving things like miss the rush hour is incalculably beneficial (not least as the journey on my bike is about 5 times safer after the rush, not least of other cyclists, has subsided).
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by jean View PostIt just seemed odd to me that LMP should have thought the pedants would have been in favour of the o-version, when everyone knows pedants are big on etymology.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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