At Succeed Socially on May 23, 2022 Mr. Chris MacLeod has a
balanced and thoughtful 2500-word article titled Pros and Cons of Toastmasters.
He covers each of the following 18 topics with a brief paragraph (or two or
three):
BENEFITS OF TOASTMASTERS
It’s an extremely safe, supportive, encouraging environment.
It’s very affordable.
It’s not just about giving formal pre-written, rehearsed
speeches.
You can get lots of constructive feedback on your speaking
style.
You can choose what facets of public speaking you want to
work on.
It provides the kind of general social opportunities joining
any club does.
WAYS TOASTMASTERS MAY NOT BE A FIT FOR EVERYONE
Toastmasters isn’t an all-around social skills class.
Every club is different. Some may not be what you’re looking
for. Members may not be that experienced or helpful, and try to push you in a
direction you don’t want to go.
Toastmasters can over-emphasize how to deliver a speech, and
ironing out little mistakes and tics, rather than having engaging ideas to
share.
Toastmasters can encourage an expressive, theatrical style
of speaking that doesn’t translate to everyday situations.
Members can be too supportive with their feedback, and
afraid to give harsher critiques.
You may not get to do a ton of speaking each meeting, which
might not be enough practice for what you’re trying to achieve.
It’s a fair amount of work to write and rehearse a series of
speeches.
Table Topics can seem really daunting at first, but after a
while it can seem like a glorified improv game that doesn’t carry over into
real life as much as you first assumed.
A FEW MORE SUBJECTIVE REASONS TOASTMASTERS MAY NOT BE
EVERYONE’S CUP OF TEA
Toastmasters meetings can feel rigid, overly structured, and
full of fluff.
The supportive, upbeat atmosphere can feel fake, insincere,
and cloying at times.
Lots of roles need to be filled each meeting, and in smaller
clubs you’ll often have to take one. You can’t just hang back and watch.
Toastmasters meetings are a tad corny.
Chris’s site also has an update page listing his other
recent web pages.
If you find that club members seem too supportive with
feedback, then you might be able to find an Advanced club with more experienced
members willing to share their ideas for improvement. On May 2, 2022 I blogged about the Advantages of receiving multiple speech evaluations in Advanced
Toastmasters Clubs. And on January 15, 2021 I blogged about how Toastmasters also is for professional speakers, like NSA
members.
The cartoon was adapted from this image at Wikimedia Commons.
My friendly local public library got in Randall Munroe’s
2022 book titled what if? 2 (additional serious scientific answers to absurd
hypothetical questions. I have enjoyed reading it for his combination of physics,
engineering, and droll humor. Here is one example from pages 268 to 271 which is
illustrated by seven drawings:
“SNOWBALL (#54)
What if I tried to roll a snowball from the top of Mount
Everest? How big would the snowball be by the time it reached the bottom and
how long would it take? – Michaeline Yates
When snowballs roll through wet, sticky snow, they grow. For
dry snow like what you’d find on Mount Everest, a rolled snowball wouldn’t get
bigger; it would just tumble down the mountain like any other object.
But even if Mount Everest were covered in the kind of wet
snow that made good snowballs, a snowball wouldn’t get that big.
A rolling snowball picks up snow and gets bigger, and a
bigger snowball picks up more snow. This may sound like a recipe for some kind
of exponential growth, but an idealized snowball’s growth actually slows down
over time. It keeps getting bigger and wider, but each new meter it rolls adds
less to the diameter. The growth slows because the width of the snowball’s
track – and thus the amount of snow it picks up - is proportional to its radius,
but the surface area the new snow has to cover is proportional to radius
squared, which means that each new clump of snow has to be spread out over more
area. People use the word ‘snowballed’ to mean ‘grew faster and faster,’ but in
a sense the truth is the reverse.
Mount Everest is very tall [ 8.85 km], so even with a
slowing growth rate, there’s still a lot of room for a snowball to pick up
snow. The mountain’s three main faces descend about 5 kilometers before they
level off into glacial valleys. In theory, an idealized snowball rolling down a
5-kilometer slope would pass through enough snow to grow to 10 or 20 meters
wide by the time it reached the bottom.
In practice, it wouldn’t make it more than a few hundred
meters, even in perfect wet snow. There’s a limit to how big snowballs can get
before they collapse under their own weight. Gravity pulls the edges of a
snowball down, so the insides are under tension. If a snowball gets too big, it
collapses.
Snow has a tensile strength, which means it resists being
pulled apart. Its tensile strength isn’t that high – which is why you
don’t see a lot of ropes made of snow – but it’s not zero. A typical tensile
strength for well-packed snow might be a few kilopascals, which is stronger
than wet sand, weaker than most types of cheese, and about 1/10,000 th that of
most metals.
There’s a number in engineering that measures how long a
dangling piece of material can get before snapping under its own weight. It’s
called the ‘free-hanging length,’ and it’s a ratio between a material’s tensile
strength, density, and gravity.
The free-hanging length of a material provides a pretty
decent approximation – to within an order of magnitude, at least – of how big a
ball of material could get. Its value for snow ranges from less than a meter
for fluffy snow to a meter or two for heavy, packed snow.
This formula lets us compare different materials. It tells
us that the largest snowball would be bigger than the largest ball of sand –
which is even weaker than snow and much more dense – but smaller than the
largest ball of hard cheese an nowhere near as large as the largest ball of
iron. {Sandball 10-15 cm. Snowball 1-2m. Gruyere Cheeseball 8 meters. Ironball
500 meters.}
If you look up videos of people rolling large snowballs down
hills, you’ll see that they usually break apart when they reach a size of a few
meters, just as the formula suggests.
But slopes that can support self-growing snowballs are rare,
and they’re rare because they can support self-growing snowballs. If a
snowball grows while it’s rolling down a hill, it will break apart. A snowball
that breaks apart becomes a bunch of little snowballs, which will start to
grow, too, just like the original.
Congratulations, you’ve invented an avalanche.”
On November 2, 2019 I blogged about Randall’s first what if? book in a post titled A thought provoking how to book by Randall Munroe. And on
February 7, 2023 I blogged about a comic of his in a post titled An xkcd comic
on a size comparison that is unhelpful.
There are a bunch more examples from what
if? 2 posted here. One is about how to Catch a Bullet. Another asks How long
would it take for a single person to fill up an entire swimming pool with their
own saliva? A third is What if Au Bon
Pain lost this lawsuit and had to pay the plaintiff $2 undecillion?
An image of a brush rest showing Japanese boys rolling a
snowball came from Wikimedia Commons.
My previous post on February 22, 2023 is titled Use a flipchart,
a whiteboard, or a napkin to capture your ideas. What do you do next to shape your
ideas into a coherent speech or document? Back on March 17, 2011 I blogged about how to Use a storyboard to organize your presentation. A storyboard is a
shorthand visual script. If you have a flipchart or a whiteboard, then you can
write each idea down on either a 3” x 3” sticky note or a 3” x 5” sticky note card (as shown above). Then you can easily move those notes around until they tell
a clear story. There is an old but excellent article by Marie Wallace at LLRX
back on November 1, 1997 titled Guide on the Side – The power of Post-Its: Picture
your speech.
If you can’t keep a flipchart or whiteboard free, then you instead
can use the smaller 1-1/2” x 2” sticky notes inside of a file folder, as shown
above (and in my 2011 post). Bert Decker and company have a tool and system
based on this called the GRID (a trademark). It is discussed at length in his
bookYou’ve Got to Be Believed to Be Heard. They have a four-page .pdf download
about it that mentions the acronym SHARP which stands for Stories, Humor, Analogies,
References (and quotes), and Pictures (and visuals). They have a blog post on June
20, 2018 titled SHARPen Your Edge, and another single-page .pdfdownload titled Decker
SHARPS - Your cheat sheet & guide.
I usually think of a flipchart as a tool for presenting a
speech for a small group. But it also can help you think up new ideas, when you
begin writing a speech.
I saw an article by Jeffrey Gitomer titled Sales Truths or Sales
Consequences. They’re up to you! #656 which contained to following wisdom:
“FLIP CHART GOLD
I always use a flip chart when I have a new idea or start a
new project.
The flip chart helps you define and outline ideas and
concepts in ways you hadn’t thought of before. As you write each point, you’re
spurred on to the next point – and you think ‘Oh, yeah’ while you write
furiously. The flip chart is the perfect medium to make a concept transferable
to the prospect.
NOTE: Flip charts are cheap. They cost between $50 and $200.
Are you waiting for the boss to buy you one? Major clue: You have your own
money. Start to invest it in the most important person in the world: you.
What’s one idea worth? What’s an idea that you capture
worth? How many ideas have you lost because you didn’t write them down? The
flip chart captures. The flip chart communicates, expands and solidifies plans.
The flip chart preserves so you can see what you’ve done and revise your plans.
The flip chart is not an option."
That advice had appeared in the Grand Rapids Business
Journal on November 15, 2004 in an article titled These Nuggets of Wisdom
Smooth the Sales Process. You also might use a whiteboard, and then capture an
image with the camera on your cell phone.
There is another article titled Waiter, can I have a
napkin please? There Jeffrey talks about reading Dan Roam’s 2013 book, The Back
of the Napkin. That book is subtitled Solving problems and selling ideas with
pictures. Jeffrey expanded it to be Capturing thoughts, creating ideas,
clarifying ideas, solving problems, and selling ideas with pictures and words. Another
June 2, 2008 article by Mr. Gitomer titled Napkin thinking. Paper power. says that
he wrote the initial concept for his 2004 The Little Red Book of Selling down
on a napkin, and then clarified it on a flipchart. See more about the back story
here at Google Books.
I blogged about Mr. Gitomer back on May 14, 2012 in a post
titled Who invented the flip chart? and also on October 21, 2013 in another post titled A thumb up for Jeffrey Gitomer.
On February 16, 2023 the U. S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission has an article about a product recall titled KLIM recalls
backcountry probes due to risk of severe injury or death. These KLIM A300 folding
probes are 118” long (almost ten feet). They consist of seven ~17” sections that are supposed to
be assembled to form a rigid pole which can be pushed into the snow (as shown
above) to locate (touch) someone buried by an avalanche.
The probe design is similar to, but much taller than that
for a folding cane used by blind persons, as shown above. Reportedly the probes
can fail to operate properly when deployed by rescuers.
Decades ago it was easy to distinguish a flipchart from a
whiteboard. A flipchart was a pad made from flexible sheets of paper that were
written on using permanent markers. Conversely, a whiteboard was a rigid, shiny
surface that was written on using dry-erase markers.
Today there is an overlap where there are special erasable flipchart
sheets from suppliers in several countries. From Pacon in the U. S. there are
25” by 30” GOwrite dry erase easel pads. And from Wipebook Corporation in Ottawa,
Canada there are 24” by 30” Wipebook flipcharts. Also, from Magic Whiteboard
Limited in Worcester, England there are 60 cm by 80 cm (23.6” by 31.5”) Magic Whiteboard sheets. From the Netherlands there are MOYU Flipstone with 65 by 100
cm (25.6” by 39.4”) sheets and Bambook Flip-ever with 59.4 cm by 84 cm (25.4”
by 33.1”) sheets.
If you do not have the lead time to order these special
sheets, then you can make your own dry-erase sheets by putting strips of clear packaging
tape over standard flipchart paper.
How long have erasable flipcharts been around? I found them
described in a Training 101 article at the October 1993 issue of Training &
Development magazine. A section by Shawn L. Doyle on page 18 titled Ten Tips
for Fabulous Flips said under #2:
Wouldn’t it be nice if you could reuse the same charts over
again? You can. Here are several options:
If you have a limited number of charts, frame them in clear
plastic frames and use a grease pencil to check off major points. After the
session, you can wipe off the pencil marks with a soft cloth.
Cut long strips of acetate (transparency material) and glue
or tape them to the flipchart pages in the areas you want to mark on. Again,
use a grease pencil so that you can wipe off your in-class work. The acetate
strips are not visible from a distance.
Take your flipchart pages to a laminating company and have
them laminated. This creates a slick, erasable surface.”
There is an excellent article by Patricia Fripp at her web
site on August 12, 2022 titled How do you accept an award? Be gracious. Be modest.
Be prepared! A briefer version titled How do you accept an award?just appeared yesterday in the
November/December 2022 issue of Speaker Magazine under Q & A TIME (on pages
40 and 41). Fripp also has a five-minute YouTube video.
A third article by Emily Sachs in the April 2021 issue of Toastmaster
magazine (pages 16 and 17) is titled How to Accept an Award. It is followed by
a fourth article from Paul Sterman about speeches at the Oscars (on pages 18
and 19) titled Speechmaking from the Stars.
There is yet another article by Eddie Rice at RICE
Speechwriting on June 2, 2022 titled Awards Speeches: 7 questions to answer to
craft a great acceptance speech.
The 1937 portrait of a man holding his trophy came from
Wikimedia Commons.
At Rolling Stone on February 13, 2023 there is an article by
Ryan Bort titled Trump used ‘Classified’ folder as a lamp shade, lawyer says. Trump
reportedly did this:
“He has one of those landline telephones next to his bed,
and it has a blue light on it, and it keeps him up at night. So he took the
manilla folder and put it over so it would keep the light down so he could
sleep at night,” Parlatore said. “It’s just this folder. It says ‘Classified
Evening Summary’ on it. It’s not a classification marking. It’s not anything
that is controlled in any way. There is nothing illegal about it.”
I have a handset for the landline phone sitting in a charger
next to my bed. It has a yellow light (arrow) at the upper left corner that blinks when
there is a message. So, I took a piece of black electrical tape, poked a small
hole in it with a pin, and mostly covered up that light.
When most people Trump’s age see a blue light, they think of
a special in a Kmart store.
At the beginning of February there were lots of questionable
articles about a Chinese balloon. Wikipedia has a page titled 2023 China
balloon incident.
It just was a balloon, not an airship (or a blimp)
The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines an airship as:
“a lighter-than-air aircraft having propulsion and steering
systems”
As shown above, via a recolored drawing, an airship has
pointed ends, propellors, and fins. But a silly statement from the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China on February 3, 2023 titled Foreign
Ministry Spokesperson’s Remarks on the Unintended Entry of a Chinese Unmanned
Airship into US Airspace Due to Force Majeure instead claimed:
“The airship is from China. It is a civilian airship used
for research, mainly meteorological, purposes. Affected by the Westerlies and with
limited self-steering capability, the airship deviated far from its planned
course. The Chinese side regrets the unintended entry of the airship into US
airspace due to force majeure. The Chinese side will continue
communicating with the US side and properly handle this unexpected situation
caused by force majeure.”
DOD News from the U. S. Department of Defense has three
mostly good articles. One on February 2, 2023 is titled U. S. tracking high-altitude
surveillance balloon, a second on February 3, 2023 is titled General says
Chinese surveillance balloon now over center of U. S., and a third on February 4,
2023 is titled F-22 safely shoots down Chinese spy balloon off South Carolina coast.
The maneuverable surveillance balloon flew at an altitude of
about 60,000 feet (11.4 miles)
The February 3rd DOD Newsarticle opened by stating:
“As of noon today, the maneuverable Chinese surveillance
balloon, which was over Montana yesterday, was at an altitude of about 60,000
feet and floating over the center of the continental United States in an
easterly direction, posing no risk to commercial aviation, military assets or
people on the ground, said the Pentagon press secretary.”
Calling it maneuverable is rather questionable. Presumably
it can change altitude, and thus catch the different direction of those prevailing
winds. Surveillance is a fancy word. Spy would be plain English.
That balloon drifted at about the speed of a bicycle race on
flat ground
An article by Meredith Deliso at ABC News on February 5,
2023 is titled Timeline: Where the Chinese surveillance balloon was spotted
before being shot down. She reported that it was over Reed Point, Montana on February 1 st at 4:20
PM, and reached Myrtle Beach, North Carolina on February 4 th at 2:39 PM. That is
a flying distance of 1813 miles or a driving distance of 1960 miles in ~70
hours, for a speed of 26 to 28 miles per hour. An article by Whit Yost at Bicycling
on June 24, 2022 titled What is a pro cyclist’s average speed in the Tour de France?
reported that on flat terrain it is 25
to 28 miles per hour. There was plenty of time to cover up anything we wished
to hide from cameras on that balloon.
If it flew over Idaho, then an A-10 Warthog from the Idaho
National Guard would have shot it down
An article by Kevin Miller at KIDO TALK RADIO on February 4,
2023 titled 6 Reasons why Idaho would shoot down sneaky Chinese spy
balloon claimed that:
“…a spy balloon would be shot down if it flew over Idaho.”
But, according to the article by Meredith Deliso at ABC News
on February 5, 2023 it did reenter U.S. airspace over northern Idaho on January
31 st. Kevin’s article included seven images of A-10 aircraft. And a quick
glance at the Wikipedia page for that attack airplane would have revealed its
service ceiling is just 45,000 feet – 15,000 feet (2.84 miles) below the 60,000
feet the balloon flew at. The effective firing range for its 30 mm automatic
cannon only is 4,000 feet, so it would not have been able to engage the balloon.
An F-15E Strike Eagle with a higher service ceiling of 60,000 feet could get
into 20 mm cannon range. They are in Idaho with the 366th Fighter Wing at
Mountain Home Air Force Base.
An average American could have shot it down with a handgun
or rifle
U. S. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene had tweeted:
"Literally every regular person I know is talking about how to shoot
down the Chinese Spy Balloon. It would be great if an average Joe shot it down
because China Joe won't. Regular Americans can do everything better than the
government and actually care about our country."
But a bullet from a 9mm handgun only can reach a
height of 4,000 feet. One from a .30-06 rifle can reach 10,000 feet. One from a 0.50 cal rifle (the most powerful Barrett used by snipers) can reach just 15,000
feet. An article by Thomas Kika at Newsweek on February 4, 2023 is titled Marjorie
Taylor Greene mocked by conservatives for Chinese spy balloon idea. After it
was shot down, Ciara O’Rourke at Politifact on February 6, 2023 has a fact-check article titled The US government, not a vigilante, shot down a
Chinese balloon.
Kevin Miller’s article also made the impractical suggestion
that:
“Idahoans would take their large rifles with scopes to the
top of the state’s largest mountains to shoot down the balloon.”
Our tallest mountain, Mount Borah, is 12,662 feet high. Add
15,000 feet for a 50-cal rifle bullet, and you could shoot 27,662 feet high or
less than half the balloon’s 60,000 foot altitude.
How many times have U. S. aircraft flown over China?
Quite a lot before there was a thaw in our relations with
them. For background, look up the Wikipedia page titled 1972 visit by Richard
Nixon to China. An article by William Beecher in the New York Times on July 29,
1971 titled U.S. spy flights over China ended to avoid incident said that:
“Peking has publicly protested nearly 500 incursions of its
air space by United States aircraft.
Since I am a boomer, I have been mostly enjoying reading a
2022 book by Professor Arthur C. Brooks titled From Strength to Strength
(Finding success, happiness, and deep purpose in the second half of life). He
has the following nine headings for his chapters:
Your professional decline is coming (much) sooner than you
think [previously an Atlantic article]
The second curve
Kick your success addiction
Start chipping away
Ponder your death
Cultivate your aspen grove
Start your vanaprastha
Make your weakness your strength
Cast into the falling tide
And then his Conclusion is just Seven Words to Remember:
Use things. Love people. Worship the divine.
In chapter 2, The Second Curve, he describes how you need to
consider adding both fluid intelligence (peaking early in a career) and later
rising crystallized intelligence (using a stock of knowledge). Raymond Cattell
said fluid intelligence increased to the mid-thirties and declined through the
forties and fifties. But meanwhile crystallized intelligence increased through
middle and late adulthood.
Chapter 9, titled Cast into the falling tide, includes four
lessons:
Lesson 1: Identify your marshmallow
Lesson 2: The work you do has to be the reward
Lesson 3: Do the most interesting things you can
Lesson 4: A career change doesn’t have to be a straight line
In Lesson 4 he describes four categories for career changes
starting on page 209:
Linear careers – which climb steadily upward (with
everything building on everything else);
Steady-state careers – involving staying at one job and
growing in expertise;
Transitory careers – involving jumping from job to job or
even field to field;
Spiral careers – like a series of mini-careers, shifting
fields building on previous ones;
Since Dr. Brooks is a Harvard Business School professor, he
includes references to lots of notes at the back of his book. But sometimes the
references diverge from reality. In Chapter 5 (Ponder Your Death), a section titled
Understanding the fear of demise begins on page 97 with:
“ ‘The idea of death, the fear of it haunts the human animal
like nothing else,’ anthropologist Ernest Becker wrote in his classic 1973
book, The Denial of Death. A majority of people fear death to some extent, and
most surveys find that about 20 percent have a high level of fear (Ref. 2).
Some people have a fear that is so extremes as to rise to the level of a
psychiatric condition known as ‘thanatophobia.’ “
However, in 1973 there was a well-known survey by R. H. Bruskin
Associates which I blogged about on October 27, 2009 in a post titled The 14
Worst Human Fears in the 1977 Book of Lists: where did this data really come
from? Speaking before a group was the most common fear (40.6%) while death only
ranked seventh (18.7%). What about Reference 2? It is to a blog post on October
11, 2016 about the Chapman University Survey of American Fears titled America’s
Top Fears 2016. Fear of dying was much lower than in the 1973 survey - it only ranked
#59! That was the second Chapman survey of seven including dying.
Detailed results
for dying from those surveys are shown above in a table. In 2015 dying ranked
#43, and in 2022 is ranked #61! The sum for Very Afraid plus Afraid was 18.8%
in 2016, and had a mean of 25.4%.
Earlier, in Chapter 2 on page 57 Dr. Brooks says:
“Fear of failure has been studied quite a bit. For example,
researchers have found the public speaking is college students’ most common
fear; some scholars have famously asserted that people fear it even more than
death (Ref. 24).”
But the article on college students is incorrectly listed
under reference 23. And it is about redoing the 1973 Bruskin survey. (I blogged about it on May 17, 2012 in a post titled More university students in the U. S.
fear public speaking than fear death, but death is their top fear). Reference 24
is to an article by Glenn Croston in Psychology Today on November 29, 2012 titled
That thing we fear more than death. I discussed Croston’s article in a post on April
25, 2015 titled Is public speaking by far the scariest thing that people face?
Even more than death? No, it is not.
What do the Chapman surveys say about fear of public
speaking? A table shown above summarizes the details from all eight of them. In
all but the first the fear of public speaking ranks way down – from #26 in 2015
to #59 in 2018. And a > or a < shows whether more or less people fear
speaking than dying. Note that more feared it for 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2022,
but less feared it for 2018, 2019, and 2020-21. Also note that we can have very
different percentages depending on the level of fear. For 2022 it is 14.0% for
Very Afraid, 34.0% for Very Afraid plus Afraid (what is in the Chapman percentage list) and 69.2% for the grand sum of Very Afraid plus Afraid plus Slightly
Afraid.
Way back on July 9, 2011 I blogged aboutThe Joan of Arc
theory: your fear of public speaking comes from how a past life ended badly. Then,
on September 30, 2015, I blogged aboutThe Joan of Arc theory again – fear of
public speaking comes from being burned in a past life.
I found an article by a psychologist who does hypnotherapy
and wrote a book, Karen Joy, at Llewellyn on February 21, 2022 titled 10 Signs
of Unresolved Past Lives. It has the following section titled Deep Fear of Public Speaking:
“While most of us fear public speaking, some can overcome their fear by taking
a practical public speaking course. Others find their dread remains. A
traumatic past life could be the cause. Here is an example:
In the past life, the client was a healer tortured to death by inquisitors
wanting a confession with the names of associates. Although the healer didn't
give anyone up, the client still felt the fear. ‘I feel this life is linked to
me holding back, not sharing who I am and not being open. I am still terrified
being found out.’ Coming to terms with this challenging life and horrible
treatment was the beginning of the client overcoming her fear of publicly
sharing her views.”
When I looked for a serious and recent article about
hypnosis, I found one by Steve Jay Lynn et al in Applied Cognitive Psychology
for 2020, (Volume 34, pages 1253 to 1264) titled Myths and misconceptions about
hypnosis and suggestion: Separating fact and fiction. An earlier .pdf version
is here. Their last topic is 6 | Myths and Misconceptions About Memory, and the last
myth is 6.2 Hypnotic age regression can retrieve accurate memories from the distant
past. The second (and last) paragraph says:
“The popular Dr. Oz show, psychiatrist Dr. Brian Weiss, who
touts the value of ‘past life therapy’ and movies like A Stir of Echoes
legitimize past life age regression in popular culture. But research suggests a
contrary view. When the accuracy of memories of age regressed subjects is
checked against factual information from the suggested time period (e.g., 10th century) the information provided is almost invariably incorrect (Spanos,
Menary, Gabora, DuBreuil, & Dewhurst, 1991) and is mostly consistent with
information experimenters provide regarding their supposed past life identities
(e.g., different race, culture, sex). These findings imply that recall reflects
expectancies, fantasies, and beliefs regarding personal characteristics and
events during a given historical period.”
The 1835 painting by Adele Martin of Joan of Arc being
arrested came from Wikimedia Commons.
Randall Munroe’s xkcd webcomic for February 3, 2023 titled Size Comparisons is shown above (with color added by me). The dialogue says:
Cueball: “Texas is so big that if you expanded it to the
size of the solar system, the
ants there would be as big as Rhode Island.”
Ponytail: Wow!
…Wait.
Enlarging the state takes the comparison in the wrong
direction. (Pluto is about 3.7 billion miles from the sun, so that's about 4,620,000 times). To make that size comprehensible it instead should be shrunk down to
a more human scale. (Back on July 12, 2016 I blogged aboutHow to make
statistics understandable).
According to Wikipedia, as shown above, Texas is 773 miles
wide by 801 miles high. If you drove on
I-10 from El Paso east to Beaumont, it would take you about 11.7 hours to go
833 miles. If we shrank Texas by 42,000 times, then it would become roughly
100 feet across (97.2 feet wide by 100.7 feet high). For comparison, a basketball
court is 94 feet by 50 feet.
Wikipedia has a web page aboutSolar System models. There is
one in Boulder, Colorado at the Fiske Planetarium with the following
description:
“The Colorado Scale Model Solar System depicts the Sun, the
planets, and the distances between them all on the same scale of 1 to 10 billion.
That is, real objects and distances are 10 billion times larger than objects
and distances in the model.
On this scale, Sun is about the size of a large grapefruit,
while the Earth is the size of the ball point in a pen. It’s 15 big steps from
the Sun to Earth, about 75 yards to marble-size Jupiter, and less than a
half-mile walk to Pluto, the most distant object shown in the model.”