tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8078379512095504946.post4861600083380743467..comments2024-03-26T06:17:49.527-07:00Comments on Had Enough Therapy?: The Bonfire of the Feminist VanitiesStuart Schneidermanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12784043736879991769noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8078379512095504946.post-19338093931503179352011-11-15T06:15:42.814-08:002011-11-15T06:15:42.814-08:00Not to quibble but many of men are actually worki...Not to quibble but many of men are actually working when they walk away from the desk or around the building. Having spent a few years as an analyst I know that if one spend too much time thinking about a problem one begin to lose sight of what it is that they are thinking about. A sort of not being able to see the forest for the trees.<br />I was always amazed at how fast a solution would come to me if I just walked around the building. I would no more than sit down at my desk after a walk than the solutions would just start pouring forth. Interestingly I believe that the subconscious mind never stops working ideas out if one does not allow the conscious mind to get in the way. Far too many people never go pat the conscious level. Too much analyzation leads to paralyzation.<br />I don't think feminists will ever realize how to truly use the sub conscious mind. It is one form of multitasking that men tend to use though it it has more systemization and is hierarchical in process. Being able to use the "theater of the mind" to analyze and manipulate the various variables and to extemporize from that abstraction to reality takes time to develop. The fact that a feminist cannot see the value in taking what looks like a break denotes a rather shallow mind.Dennishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14962996070458991675noreply@blogger.com