Doctor!

With my sniffles continuing, I headed online for cutting-edge curative ideas, and stumbled upon the suggestion for a useful piece of medical equipment: a hair dryer.

Apparently, at least two doctors claim that blowing the dryer up your nose for three to five minutes at a stretch, a few times a day, works wonders.

To me, the science seems compelling. Rhinovirus grows best at temperatures around 91 degrees, and dies above 105. So, significantly raising the temperature of your sinuses and nasal passages for a few minutes should kill much of the virus, and reduce the ability of the rest to reproduce. Plus, warm air dries everything out, temporarily shrinking tissue and relieving sinus pressure. Finally, heat interrupts the histamine reaction, preventing swelling and sensitivity to other allergens.

All of which, as I said, seems to make sense. The problem being that blowing a dryer up your face causes you to turn bright red, which in turn causes your girlfriend to collapse on the floor, hysterically laughing at the impractical stupidity of this whole idea, which prevents you from doing it more than once.

Still, the empiricist in me kind of wants to try again. Any smarter folk than I with some anecdotal evidence or scientific rationale care to spur me on?

Signed

Every six months or so, Barabara Graustark, now editor-at-large for The New York Times, and previously editor of the “Living” sections, takes me out to dinner, to pick my brain for story ideas, and then to steal my signature drink.

Every good alcoholic needs a signature drink, a fallback choice at fine drinking establishments. And every good alcoholic knows the best signature drinks are those whose recipes are duly swiped from fellow hard drinkers. For the past year, mine has been the Sidecar, up, nothing on the rim, according to a recipe stolen from an agent at CAA. Before that, a Grey Goose martini, up, very dirty, courtesy of a Napa vineyard owner. But, of late, those Sidecars have seemed stale, the dirty martinis even further out-of-date.

So it was, while watching Casino Royale, a particular thrill to hear James order what I’d long known to be a real Bond martini: a Vesper Lynd, named after his love interest in that first Ian Flemming novel. In the other Bond films, James had simply ordered his martinis as ‘vodka, shaken, not stirred’. And for good reason, the Vesper Lynd sounding more gasoline substitute than cocktail:

3 parts Gordon’s Gin
1 part vodka
1/2 part Kina Lillet

Still, on a lark, I ordered one up while out in California for Thanksgiving. And again on two subsequent evenings. Then, this afternoon, I stopped by the inimitable Morrell Wine to requisition a bottle of Lillet for my own liquor shelf. Now, once my cold clears (and, let’s be honest, likely before), I’ll be mixing up countless iterations of this remarkably counter-intuitively smooth-drinking beverage.

It seems I’ve found my new signature drink. And, even better, stolen it from the very best.

Also, Post-it Flags

Like most twenty-somethings, in the couple of years post-college I occasionally considered the idea of grad school. Then, one day, it occurred to me that the only part of school I really missed was the late-summer school supply buying spree.

So, each year since, at the end of August, I trek over to Staples and shop till I drop. It may not yield a degree, but a bag full of new highlighters and three-ring binders is close enough for me.

Correlation, Causation

A large survey conducted by Esquire magazine, on “the state of the American male”, determined that liberals have 60% more sex than conservatives (3.9 hours a week versus 2.4), and that atheists and agnostics have 20% more sex partners than those who believe in God (10.7 versus 8.8).

Most people would likely assume that’s because agnostic liberals like myself have lower moral standards, and therefore more sex.

I, however, contend that causation runs the opposite direction: there’s nothing like dating / sleeping with a lot of women to shake your belief in God, or to cause you to support your right to marry men.

Lightning Round

Just one week back, I wrote about an ex who pointed out that my life seems to largely consist of a single recurring pattern: sleeplessness, illness, then the avid (drunken) pursuit of women.

And though, at the time, I maintained I was ‘mainly entrenched in avid (drunken) pursuit’, a week packed past bursting with train rides, business dinners, bar mitzvahs and funerals dragged me deeply enough into sleeplessness that I’m now nursing a spring-allergy-driven sinus infection.

Thanks to the miracles of modern antibiotics, however, I’m already on the upswing. Which means I should be, fortunately, back to avid (drunken) pursuit by the end of the week.

The Looking Glass

`Cheshire Puss,’ she began, rather timidly, as she did not at all know whether it would like the name: however, it only grinned a little wider. `Come, it’s pleased so far,’ thought Alice, and she went on. `Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here?’

`That depends a good deal on where you want to get to,’ said the Cat.

`I don’t much care where–‘ said Alice.

`Then it doesn’t matter which way you go,’ said the Cat.

– Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland

I’ve long been fascinated by the neurobiology of attention – the interactions of parts of our brains like the hypothalamus and the reticular activation system. Each day, all day, we’re bombarded by sensations; yet, somehow, we filter out the vast majority, letting through a select few. Reading a book, we lose ourselves in the pages, blocking out completely the world around us. Or, talking at a cocktail party, we tune down others’ conversations, focusing in on just the words of our conversational companions.

I’m reminded of that particularly when I buy something new. I remember, in college, purchasing a Toyota Celica, and suddenly finding myself passing hundreds of other Celicas on the highways and streets. Not because, of course, people had suddenly rushed out to lease similar cars; but, rather, because my brain decided the ones that had always been out there were, for the first time, interesting enough to pass through to my conscious mind.

All of which is to say that I believe the brain is largely cybernetic. Not in the computerized sense of the word, but closer to it’s Greek root, ‘kybernetes’, which means something akin to ‘steersman’. It begins with an end in mind, then focuses us on and readjusts us towards those things that bring us closer and closer to that goal.

Which leaves us floundering, then, when the target isn’t clearly locked; without somewhere we want to end up, like Alice, it doesn’t much matter which way we go.

I’ve been thinking about that a lot lately, mainly in the context of dating, of big city romance. With so many potential partners – an embarrassment of riches – we urban singles are weighed down by the tyranny of choice. There are so many people who might be right, and so many more who might be just a bit righter still than whomever we’re currently with.

But most of us, at a very basic level, don’t have any idea of what ‘right’ looks or feels like in the first place. We drink our way from date to date, trying to guess, hoping our hearts or guts or friends or mothers, or even the Cheshire Cat, will somehow jump in to tell us when we’ve found it.

So, for weeks, I’ve been brainstorming my way through my own sense of ‘right’, my own list of qualities I think I’m looking for. I’ve been quietly analyzing the long happily married couples I know, squaring that with my own experience, adding ideas, crossing off items, and boiling things down to the bare essentials: things I can look for that, alongside the requisite lightning bolt, would leave me happily ever after. In short, a target, an end in mind that my subconscious might, day by day, guide me towards.

And while my list is still brewing, certainly not yet ready for public consumption, I did, earlier this week, find at least one item that seems sure to make the final cut. Dr. Dan Gottlieb, a quadriplegic psychologist and guest on NPR’s Fresh Air, related the story of a young woman who he’d seen in his practice. “I feel like my soul is a prism,” she told him. “But everybody sees just one color. Nobody sees the prism.”

As someone too long practiced at playing social chameleon, I find her concern hits particularly close to home. Which is why, among anything else, I can see the appeal, or perhaps the necessity, of ending up with someone with whom I could always be my full, garishly multi-colored self.

Make a Difference

Last night, I was having drinks with a few friends who work in private asset management for exceedingly wealthy families. A few rounds in, one friend observed that, while such families are inevitably hell-bent on building their net worths, they’re also textbook examples of the law of diminishing returns. Which is to say, from a quality of life perspective, the first billion makes a far bigger dent than the second.

At the same time, this afternoon I found in my mailbox a pitch letter for a ‘sponsor a young Sudanese refugee’ program. For just a dollar a day, it explained, I could change the life of an African child.

And while, certainly, such sponsor programs are exceedingly noble in their goals, they also seem to be a dime a dozen. Which prompted me to combine the two threads – sponsorship and billionaire families – for a brilliantly outside-the-box business idea:

For just $10,000 a day, I can help those families sponsor a young New Yorker. (Namely, me. Though, not being greedy, I’m totally happy to start a list for other such civically-minded volunteers should a sufficient number of sponsoring families take the call to action.)

Like that kid in Sudan, I’d be more than happy to write a monthly letter to my sponsor. I’d even include pictures: me at Nobu enjoying an omakase dinner, at the Hotel Gansevoort with table service and a bottle of Cristal.

And, in turn, I’d even be happy to sponsor a whole village of those little kids in Sudan. Take that, foes of trickle-down economics.

A few friends in the legal world have pointed out that it may be a long road to 501c3 status for this burgeoning nonprofit, given our near-sighted government’s narrow understanding of ‘need’.

But, I’m convinced that, regardless of donation tax status, smart families interested in really changing lives should be quick to sign on. I’d tell you as soon as they do, but, to be honest, it may take a few weeks to install an internet connection on my new private Bahamian island.

Paradox

I’ve recently noted two beliefs strongly held by nearly every one of my female friends:

1. Equal pay for equal work.
2. The guy pays on the first date.

Sorry, ladies; choose one.

Stuff It

If it’s Christmas, it’s also annual ‘sinuses full of snot week’, a joyous holiday marked with much tissue usage and the consumption of bowl after bowl of chicken soup.

I’m celebrating thusly myself, and have noted that friends around the blogosphere are sharing in the fun as well. So, to everyone colded, flued, or sinus infectioned, take solace in the collective nature of our pain. Misery, as they say, loves company.

Intern-tainment

For a while, I’ve thought about getting goldfish, or maybe an ant farm. Today, however, I realized it’s far easier to plug in an iSight camera, point it at Cyan’s interns, and watch them on live video stream in a corner of my computer screen.

At least as entertaining as fish or ants, and I don’t even have to feed them.