Category Archive: Personal Development

Photo: Lilac Dreams

Lilac Dreams

Lilac (purple) flowers at the Daytona State College campus. These aren’t lilacs, but I like the name so I’m using it to refer to the color.

A friend volunteered to let me borrow his lens: a Sigma EF 105mm 1:2.8. I have it till next week, so I’ve been taking pictures of stuff with the different perspective it offers. Everything’s so close; I can’t get any sort of landscapes with this. But it’s interesting to focus on the details, and I can get closer to flowers than I can with the kit lens.

While I take good …

Your Blog is a Marching Wiki

By Richard X. Thripp at 2008-09-04T20:16:06 in Personal Development, with these tags: blogging, congruity, goals, growth, internet, life, links, wikis, writing, 0 Comments.

When I think of a wiki, I think of a collection of articles that can be edited by anyone. But wikis have another core trait. If you’ve ever looked up an article on Wikipedia, you’ve noticed that practically every other word is a link to related articles in the wiki.

There are no direct links to external sites. All those are footnotes or references, appearing at the bottom of the page. But within the text, there are internal links all over the place. It’s a self-contained Internet.

I think your blog should be the same way. This isn’t reasonable …

Over-Emphasis

By Richard X. Thripp at 2008-09-03T20:44:38 in Personal Development, with these tags: careers, courage, goals, life, niches, purpose, work, 2 Comments.

When you work in an area you love, you’re far more efficient than doing what you are indifferent to. Rather than all being general practitioners, by focusing on one aspect of life we can make much more progress than focusing on many. Instead of gaining a cursory knowledge of ten skills, we gain real expertise in one. While this can be known as specializing, or niches, I like the term “over-emphasis.” You over-emphasis your strong areas, while giving moderate attention or even no attention to your weak spots. You simply don’t develop in areas you have no talent for.

An example: …

ShareThis   Printable Version      
More stuff:   Photo: Blue Marbles  

Money and Love

What I made online, 2008-08

Just wanted to give you a little hint for how my websites did last month. My goal is $1 per day, and while I didn’t hit that every day last month, the overall total was $56.41, or $1.80 per day.

I can see I’m making a bigger impact on the world. In July, I made $20, so my income basically tripled last month. You can’t get that kind of raise with a regular job.

$53.73 was from Google AdSense; $2.68 was from this blog’s Amazon Associates commissions.

Of the $53.73, $1.54 came from Brilliant Photography and …

Photo: Don’t Cross Me

By Richard X. Thripp at 2008-08-31T04:44:09 in Personal Development, Photography, Stock Photos, with these tags: beauty, black, canon rebel xti, christianity, clouds, contrast, efs 18-55mm, religion, silhouettes, sky, sunrises, yellow, 0 Comments.

Don\'t Cross Me

… or I’ll cross you right back! Not really, but that’s the best title I can think of for this photo. It’s a church at sunrise, with the ever-wonderful cross towering above.

I edited this in Adobe Camera Raw 4.0 exclusively. Here are the settings I used:

Don't Cross Me settings in Adobe Camera Raw 4.0

I thought about going for cool, bluish tones in the sky, but the golden yellows work better. As you can see, I added contrast and blackness too, to make sure the cross and building really is a silhouette.

I …

ShareThis   Printable Version      
More stuff:   Entry Mirroring    Sweet Progress    Don’t Multitask  

Why Abortion is Wrong Even if it’s Right

By Richard X. Thripp at 2008-08-30T09:38:58 in Personal Development, with these tags: abortion, challenges, children, death, ethics, goals, growth, humor, life, teenagers, 0 Comments.

Richard's picks:

I’m going down a hypothetical path where abortion is ethical and just, despite knowing it isn’t. I will prove that even if my knowledge is false and abortion is ethical, one who goes down that “ethical” path reaches a dead end, the end result for which is tenfold worse than believing abortion is unethical. Finally, with plain-old logic, I’ll prove that abortion is the wrong choice either way.

Definitions

First, let’s make the definition of “fetus” really clear. The American Heritage Stedman’s Medical Dictionary defines it as this:

“In humans, the unborn young from the end of the eighth week after conception to

A Free Nation Has Free Money

By Richard X. Thripp at 2008-08-30T06:08:27 in Personal Development, with these tags: death, freedom, goals, government, life, money, myths, oppression, 0 Comments.

The purpose of any good government is to protect the lives and property of the people. Property is money. Money must be solid. It must be free, in that it is independent of the nefarious deeds of plutocrats. It doesn’t matter how much free speech or free love you have. If you have no money, you have no property, and all your “freedoms” are worthless.

The Federal Reserve, masquerading as part of our government, bails out corporations that have gotten themselves far into debt. In theory, this protects the jobs of the people, because the corporation keeps going. How does the …

My Life of Crime: Lessons from the Rebate Game

By Richard X. Thripp at 2008-08-29T05:22:33 in Personal Development, with these tags: cameras, computers, courage, crime, fun, games, goals, growth, life, materialism, money, purpose, time, 0 Comments.

This is the story of how I gamed the rebate, price-match, and coupon systems of common office and grocery stores to acquire over $25,000 in free merchandise over a period of three years. I haven’t found anyone who has done quite what I’ve done. A lot of it is unethical. I believe none of it is legally actionable, but it was exciting and I gained a lot of nice possessions. “Legal shoplifting,” if you will.

Nervous Early Days

When I started out in the rebate game, around June 2005, I thought claiming a legitimate rebate on a product was a good deal. …

17 Lessons from 17 Years

By Richard X. Thripp at 2008-08-21T09:06:50 in Personal Development, with these tags: birthdays, courage, goals, humanity, lessons, life, lists, richard x. thripp, 0 Comments.

This is my first post as a 17 year old. The pivotal birthday was 2008 August 17, a Sunday. My youth is just slipping away. :grin: I’ve written this list of seventeen things I’ve learned over the years.

1. Passion is fleeting.

I used to be fascinated with the color blue. Then when I was 6 I switched to red. Around 14 I switched back to blue again. Now I’m starting to like green (notice my website’s colors?).

Don’t count on being dedicated to writing, piano, blogging, or photography all your life. Don’t root yourself in material mediums, because it doesn’t matter …

Talking to Rocks

By Richard X. Thripp at 2008-08-14T22:50:34 in Personal Development, with these tags: brevity, conversations, people, power, rocks, time, 1 Comment.

I’ve found a powerful and time-saving technique for responding to long-winded critiques and challenges from others.

Give a short answer.

Not because a short answer is better, but because there’s no need for a long answer. A lengthy, elegant, point-by-point essay can be interesting, but it’s just more of the same because you’re engaging the criticism. That’s boring and expected. You give me any argument, and I can come up with a logical, point-by-point answer why it’s wrong. But when you fail to attempt this at all, you cut like a knife through your opponent’s inquiries. Basically, you’re saying, “your points are …


Page 1 of 3123