For about two years I worked full time in the computer industry. I worked in quality assurance for two computer game companies (including Disney Interactive) and then taught basic computer operation, graphics and 3D animation at USC. Later, I returned to QA (quality assurance) at another company and also did some customer support.
When you help consumers, to keep track of how you spend your time, you keep a record of each call and how you handled it. There is an abbreviation often seen in the record: RTFM. Without going into details, it basically means that the consumer could have avoided their problem and not wasted our time if they had just Read The Freakin' Manual. (The "F" doesn't
Is the White House haunted? There have been stories floating around for more than a century about the ghosts who may inhabit our nation's capitol, including Abraham Lincoln's ghost and the ghost of his son, Willie Lincoln. On Monday, Never Letting Go author Mark Anthony, a psychic medium, visited the Washington, D.C. NBC affiliate to discuss the haunted history of the White House.
Visit the NBCWashington website to watch the video or view it below.
Psychic Tarot
There are lots of ways to find meaning in tarot cards. There are all the esoteric and symbolic meanings that we can study. These engage the left side of the brain.
Tapping into the psychic or intuitive messages engages the right side of the brain. While there is a wide selection of books that teach the esoteric meanings, teaching intuitive and psychic skills is more challenging. Nancy and Melanie do an excellent job helping us employ our less rational gifts.
Do you see yourself as more of an intuitive/psychic reader or as an interpreter of symbols? Have you ever thought of exploring the other side of yourself to balance your readings? If so, what was the
Readers, please enjoy this guest blog post by Philip H. Farber, author of Brain Magick: Exercises in Meta-Magick and Invocation.
When I was younger I took a perverse pleasure getting into religious arguments. While I’ve always tended toward agnosticism and never felt very strongly one way or the other about organized religions, I took it as fair game that anyone coming to my door trying to convince me to join their religion was a ripe target. I was often amazed at how proselytizers could ignore simple logic and profess faith in what I considered to be pretty far-fetched ideas. It was fun, but I eventually grew out of it.
These days, the dialectic between religious zealots and