4) Also, RAM empties out every time you restart your computer; your hard drive persists, and is what saves state.
Anyway, I've found this to be a useful way to think about how *I* remember things.
And, in general, I think I have tons of RAM, and a relatively small hard drive.
Conversation
6) (Guess that my age didn't quite hit the bar.)
Some of this manifests in straightforward ways. Each Sunday, I go to nfl.com and pull up my 3 favorite games for each time slot, watching them in the background while I work.
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10) As noticed when we last spoke, I spent much of the conversation spinning a commemorative coin while talking.
nymag.com/intelligencer/
I keep a deck of cards to shuffle; on the move, I'll spin my brass rat (MIT class ring).
nymag.com/intelligencer/
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14) But I stuff my mind full of things to remember and do and think about, and those thoughts linger for a while.
Sometimes forever.
Because once they transition from RAM to hard drive, they're mostly gone. Worlds alive only as long as I remember them.
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15) So, anyway, sometimes my mind is too full, or full of things demanding and exhausting. I want it to calm down.
I'll try to lie on the beanbag, but it doesn't help. My mind is still spinning.
Clinging to its looping thoughts.
I lie awake, an insomniac once more.
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