If I finish the four I am reading now, then I will meet this goal. http://www.ezrasf.com/wplog/reading
sneezypb's Life List
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1. Read 25 books by the end of 2008
5 entries . 2 cheers1 person -
2. pay off my debt
4 cheers1,812 people -
3. Declutter for one hour every day
3 cheers40 people -
4. watch the IMDB.com Top 100 movies
2 entries . 2 cheers934 people -
5. Rip my entire CD collection
2 entries . 1 cheer148 people -
6. write a short story.
2 entries . 1 cheer851 people -
7. learn how to cook well
2 cheers57 people -
8. buy a bicycle
3 cheers237 people -
9. compliment at least one person everyday
5 cheers87 people -
10. write down my parents' stories
12 cheers28 people -
11. Become a better programmer
3 cheers952 people -
12. buy a laptop
799 people -
13. Take more pictures
12,788 people -
14. finish all 7 ruhi books
2 people -
15. become a tutor for a ruhi study circle
1 person -
16. read every book I own
1 entry1,951 people -
17. Perform deliberate acts of kindness.
1 cheer12 people -
18. Learn to cook
6,870 people -
19. publish a book of my photography
14 people -
20. Make new local friends
171 people -
21. Watch a space shuttle launch
919 people -
22. To live instead of exist
9,774 people -
23. improve my website
33 people -
24. organize my books
80 people -
25. meditate daily
3,553 people -
26. hang my photos
1 person -
27. visit home more often
1 entry . 1 cheer13 people -
28. remember that love is a verb
7 people -
29. visit the Shrine of the Bab, Baha'u'llah and Abdu'l-Baha in Israel
1 entry . 1 cheer5 people -
30. exhibit my photography
56 people
From http://www.ezrasf.com/wplog/reading
5) Gates of Fire: An Epic Novel of the Battle of Thermopylae – Steven Pressfield – 25-FEB-2008 – Herodotus’s Histories didn’t feel compelling, but it did provide context. Frank Miller’s 300 visually captured the excitement and energy we ought to feel and usually missing. Its only weakness, I thought, was context. Gates of Fire finds a great middle ground by providing both context and energy.
6) Longitude: The True Story of a Lone Genius Who Solved the Greatest Scientific Problem of His Time – Dava Sobel – 05-MAR-2008 – I’ve been to Greenwich and seen the clocks, so it was good to better understand the importance.
7) A Whole New Mind: Moving from the Information Age to the Conceptual Age – Daniel H. Pink – 06-MAR-2008 – How to tap into the resources for the right side of the brain in business.
8) Einstein and Religion: Physics and Theology – Max Jammer – 07-MAR-2008 – Okay.
9) On Education – Krishnamurti – 18-APR-2008 – Difficult to read as philosophically very different from what I believe.
10) The Persian Puzzle: The Conflict Between Iran and America – Kenneth Pollack – Done – Helped me understand the difficulties and appreciate Pollack’s prescription for solving this.
11) The Edison Gene: ADHD and the Gift of the Hunter Child – Thom Hartmann and Lucy Jo Palladino – Done -
12) The Subtle Knife – Philip Pullman – Done – Possibly even better than The Golden Compass.
13) The Red Queen: Sex and the Evolution of Human Nature – Matthew Ridley – Done – About the Red Queen hypothesis where organisms are locked in evolutionary arms races against its parasites, other members of its species, and other species.
By next month I should have finished…
14) The Amber Sypglass – Philip Pullman – in progress 90% – Conclusion of The Golden Compass and The Subtle Knife.
15) The Blind Watchmaker: Why the Evidence of Evolution Reveals a Universe Without Design – Richard Dawkins – 80% done – An atheist defense for why evolution does not need God. The design of life is too haphazard to have been by a gifted designer.
I have 4 others in progress and probably close to if not done within the next 2 months. http://www.ezrasf.com/wplog/reading
I’ve finished:
3) Doc Holliday
4) The Mighty and the Almighty: Reflections on America, God, and World Affairs
Currently reading: http://www.librarything.com/catalog.php?view=sneezypb
