Question about the state of the Universe.

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JuanDeFuca

Big Wall climber
Stoney Point
Topic Author's Original Post - Jan 8, 2006 - 01:10am PT
In many books I see the analogy of the universe as a balloon with the galaxies on its surface. Does the universe exist inside the balloon?

When we observe the universe are we looking around the surface of balloon or through it?

When we look out into space the objects the furthest away seem to be moving the fastest. How does that work in a balloon analogy?

If the universe (space?) is expanding does that mean the space inside my room here is expanding to?

What is space, is it the just the void, or does it have substance.

I really would like a better understanding of this and I know we have some PHD type's present.

Juanito

WBraun

climber
Jan 8, 2006 - 01:30am PT
There is not just one universe. Everything we can see in the sky is within only one universe, as there is a very thick outer covering of each universe so it is not possible for light to travel from one universe to another.

Therefore, by our observations and experiments we can never detect these other universes.

I will now be burned at the stake .......
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jan 8, 2006 - 01:54am PT
no burning at the stake Werner...

Juan wrote:
In many books I see the analogy of the universe as a balloon with the galaxies on its surface. Does the universe exist inside the balloon?


The problem is to describe a 4 dimensional universe 3 space dimensions and 1 time dimension, so the balloon analogy is used to get you thinking about living on the surface of the balloon (in 2D) while the balloon expands (in 3D) as our universe expands in 4D (you live in the 3D and there is something you perceive as time...). The universe does not exist inside the balloon, but on the balloon surface.


When we observe the universe are we looking around the surface of balloon or through it?


In this analogy, we look on the surface of the balloon, the "light" in the balloon universe travels along the surface of the balloon.


When we look out into space the objects the furthest away seem to be moving the fastest. How does that work in a balloon analogy?


Pick a point, as the balloon expands, points furtherest from the one we picked move away faster then close by ones. Perhaps it is easiest to see by doing it... assume a spherical balloon. The arc length is just the balloon radius multiplied by the angular separation of the points. The rate of change of the arc length is just the rate of change of the radius, multiplied by the angular separation. So if the angular separation is large, the rate of change of the arc length will be large.



If the universe (space?) is expanding does that mean the space inside my room here is expanding to?


Yes. The rate of expansion, the Hubble constant, is something like 100 km/s/megaparsec. A megaparsec is approx 3E22 m, so the expansion is 1/3E-19 (m/s)/m, so if the walls of your room are 3 m apart, they are expanding away from each other at the rate of something like 1E-19 m/s... you probably don't notice this.


What is space, is it the just the void, or does it have substance.


Not just what is space, but what is space-time... good question and very deep. It is possible that space-time is an "emergent property" of the underlying physics and not the fundamental stage on which reality plays... so "space-time" probably isn't a something in the sense you meant above. Matter (and energy) occupy space-time, in a vacuum (no matter, no energy) there are still physical processes taking place over short time periods which are creating matter (and energy) and annihilating it... but this takes place in the space-time setting.
maculated

Trad climber
San Luis Obispo, CA
Jan 8, 2006 - 02:25am PT
Wow, Ed. Thanks for taking the time to respond to that.

Now I remember why I don't look up and ponder the stars too much . . .
WoodyS

Trad climber
Riverside
Jan 8, 2006 - 03:02am PT
I've read a number of books for laymen on this and related subjects. I went through my library in search of a particular book that may have been the best of the lot. I think it's "In Search of Schrodinger's Cat" by John Gribben. I'm sure others more qualified might have other books in mind. This can be mindbending stuff, yet fascinating when put forth in a manner a layperson can grasp.
hobo

Trad climber
Jan 8, 2006 - 10:26am PT
Dance of the Wu-Li masters is also quite good. Also is an entry level physics class.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jan 8, 2006 - 12:00pm PT
we had an early return from the Valley yesterday where I blew an aid piece (second from the ground) and hit the ground hard, fortunately my ass cheek took the blow... but I did see stars when my helmeted head accelerated to a stop... now a nice large tender bruise is forming. BUT, practice makes perfect. What does this have to do with the state of the universe?

My brain was still working (that's good)

and

Gravity is a bitch.

WBraun

climber
Jan 8, 2006 - 12:19pm PT
Ed were you at the base of el cap yesterday?
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jan 8, 2006 - 12:34pm PT
no Werner, at Chuchbowl since we had only free climbed and never aided the Churchbowl Tree...

...and yesterday was a great time to do it because it didn't seem reasonable that anyone would want to free it (no one came by while we were there).
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Jan 8, 2006 - 01:35pm PT
Ed wrote

"but I did see stars when my helmeted head accelerated to a stop... now a nice large tender bruise is forming. BUT, practice makes perfect. What does this have to do with the state of the universe? "

Your ass hit a critical mass and you saw stars which don't exist in the Newtonian way that we think of stars being things we wish on when we're on a dicey piece.

How was your space time continuim between realizing the piece ripped and realizing you weren't badly hurt?

Prove that the Universe isn't a dream within some vast consciousness.

Peace

karl
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jan 8, 2006 - 01:46pm PT
not critical mass, I got up and finished the lead. The lesson? C1 shouldn't have dicey pieces.

The space-time continuum was like it always is on a fall: I closed my eyes and recall the sliding sound, at some point I opened my eyes to see the horizon rotating clockwise (as I rotated counter-clockwise) and then there was the hit and my lights went out and the stars come out... definitely thinking concussion, but a very mild one thanks to the helment. I usually have a good idea of when I'm going to be hurt, I wasn't worried in this one even with that bloody rock sticking out at the base of the climb. Gary worried a lot more than I.

Define "dream" and "conciousness" and I will work on a proof.
WBraun

climber
Jan 8, 2006 - 01:53pm PT
Wow, glad you were not hurt bad Ed. I was at Arch Rock yesterday, I didn't think anyone would be climbing in the Valley floor itself, as it is a lot warmer in the lower Merced area. The temps really dropped today.
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Jan 8, 2006 - 02:19pm PT
Let's say Ed, that you yourself could dream for 1000 years straight, and that the characters in your dream, including you if you dreamed yourself, had a much better consistency in the laws, continuity, and actions possible and impossible in that dream. Having forgot that you were dreaming, how would the characters in the dream prove or disprove that they existed within a greater consciousness, that they were dream characters?

Peace

karl
WBraun

climber
Jan 8, 2006 - 02:23pm PT
Dreams are the reflections of your waking states.

California is a state in the USA, where is the state of the Universe in?
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Jan 8, 2006 - 02:28pm PT
Let's not get too locked on into the physiology of dreaming and look at it as the contruct of consciousness and how relativities might play out within consciousness.

After all Werner, don't the Vedas say that Vishnu dreams the universe?

Peace

karl
WBraun

climber
Jan 8, 2006 - 02:32pm PT
Yes, Maha Vishnu, but not like our mundane dreams.
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Jan 8, 2006 - 03:07pm PT
I'm just trying to use an analogy to illustrate a practical understanding of the potential of our universe being non-physical the way we think of physical.

Now Science has already gone 98% of the way in showing the Universe is made of vibrating energy and even so called particles are so widely distributed that nothing is remotely "solid" except in relation to other objects of similar density.

We can see how we create apparent worlds within during our dreams. They seem real and solid when we forget ourselves in them. That's a way to understand how this wild universe is possible. So space time is curved and somehow contained in a balloon? It's doesn't take much questioning before the limitations of this answer are reached.

Always good to blow your mind. We're too locked up in our assumptions about things.

PEace

karl
Ouch!

climber
Jan 8, 2006 - 03:24pm PT
Time is expanding along with the universe. I used to be able to do things much quicker.
Brutus of Wyde

climber
Old Climbers' Home, Oakland CA
Jan 8, 2006 - 03:54pm PT
“how would the characters in the dream prove or disprove that they existed within a greater consciousness, that they were dream characters?”

They would pinch themselves.

That is what climbing offwidths is, on a macro scale… Pinching one’s self, loosely. “OW”.

“California is a state in the USA, where is the state of the Universe in?”

The Universe is in a state of confusion. Chaos, choss, Chaucer, Chaosiest. whatever.

Smack Dab in the middle of nowhere. Glad my name’s not Dab.

Dab lives down the hall. He wears dentures, just like me.

Brutus, Dab gum it.
Batrock

Trad climber
Burbank
Jan 8, 2006 - 04:43pm PT
This morning while sitting in church I was thinking of the universe, big bang, expanding universe, beginings, the end. Heady stuff to say the least. What was there before the Big Bang? What is outside our universe. I was sitting in a evangelical church so I dare not share my thoughts:) Nobody is going to change my faith but I dont see a problem with the Big Bang, expanding universe coexisting with my faith. I love thinking about this kind of stuff.
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Jan 8, 2006 - 04:52pm PT
Nice posts Batrock.

Ultimately, there's no reason why Reality should be in conflict whatever the highest truth is.

It's just that we think our knowledge of both Science and Religion to be more complete than it is.

Peace

Karl
Tahoe climber

Trad climber
Tahoe
Jan 8, 2006 - 05:11pm PT
Karl,
Riposte!

Prove that the universe IS a dream within some vast consciousness.

My $ .02:
In the end, we have to go on with our perceived reality.

For instance, I can't prove that gravity isn't a law within a dream of mine; that it, in fact, REALLY exists.
But I have to go on living with the assumption that it does, (a.k.a. perceived reality) and that's why I fall down after attempting a move that's too difficult for me.
I have tested gravity many times - so far, it has worked every time.



JuanDeFuca

Big Wall climber
Stoney Point
Topic Author's Reply - Jan 8, 2006 - 05:26pm PT
Hi Ed,

Thanks for the great info. If you saw stars when one you hit your head you probably should go to the doctor?

I did that as a boy. I wonder what causes the stars, I had a mild concussion.

Juanito
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Jan 8, 2006 - 06:17pm PT
I think there is a value in recognizing what both science and spiritualy tell us in spades, that the world is not as we see it. That recognition makes further exploration possible without which, the mystery of our existence becomes taken for granted.

To know how life would be different if we were clearer on the ultimate questions is just speculation until you know some answers.

Science has already broken down matter into a vast sea of the same vibrating energy. For science, it's ultimately all one. Somehow this power finds order and becomes this illusory universe with it's curved space time and sentient life within. That in itself could define it as consciouness. The question becomes the nature of that organizing force. It is the confluence of natural laws or a reflection of the conceptual power of that organizing power?

Was there really a beginning when linear time started? Will it end? How could something like that get started and is there a time googles and googles of years previously? Can those ideas be squared with curved time? Is anything outside of time? Is anything outside the universe? Do the possibilties reflect the sensibility of science or spirituality? Which has to ignore the the implications of it's theories? Both?

I'm not trying to restate intelligent design here. Evolution could also reflect the way consciousness organizes time and manifestation.

Food for thought. If getting too deep into these questions blows your mind. Just stay there a while.

Peace

karl

WBraun

climber
Jan 8, 2006 - 06:29pm PT
There is intelligent design. How can someone unintelligent design you. I know, a bunch of energy just mysteriously chaoticly comes together, and bingo!

All the parts of my car just chaoticly came together and bingo! Ford, Chevy, Toyota, etc. There was no one behind the design and construction. The parts mysteriously appeared and then built themselves.

This is good business, no labor to pay for.

Maybe now you can burn me at the stake ........
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Jan 8, 2006 - 06:37pm PT
Werner on a stick. Would you like that with Mustard and Relish?

;-)
Ouch!

climber
Jan 8, 2006 - 06:46pm PT
LOL! I don't know Werner, that car looks pretty chaotic to me.


WBraun

climber
Jan 8, 2006 - 07:02pm PT
Yes, this car was built by the Dover school board.
Wonder

climber
WA
Jan 8, 2006 - 07:54pm PT
who ever is having this dream, is having a nightmare.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jan 8, 2006 - 10:00pm PT
Well, I go off to the museum (the de Young had a collection of photographs on exhibition I wanted to see) and come back to find this thread expanding.

Karl, one of the distinguishing characteristics of a dream is that it occurs during sleep. It is an interesting question what I am "thinking" when I am dreaming, but this train of thought leads off in a direction you didn't want to explore.

If by dreaming you mean some state of consciousness in which we create a reality which is nothing more than our thoughts, well, sure... but I doubt that dreaming the idea can be separated from the physiology of dreaming (but I am a materialist). So I don't know what would happen if I slept 1000 years and dreamt during that time... what would the dreams be like?

I will leave thinking about consciousness until I reread Dennett's Conciousness Explained again, which I thought was extremely interesting the first time through.

Perhaps a direction this thread could go in is how ideas can have enough power to cause people to act in a particular way... whether or not there is a supernatural aspect to reality, the idea is compelling and ubiquitous.
JuanDeFuca

Big Wall climber
Stoney Point
Topic Author's Reply - Jan 9, 2006 - 01:25am PT
So is the universe is expanding in both space and time?

So the Balloon analogy is kind of weak.

It is impossible for a human to visualize 4 dimensional expansion?

Are the electrons, etc expanding?

Could we not just be a physicis experiment.

A simple simulation.

Is it not better to be just the village idiot?

Juanito



Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jan 9, 2006 - 01:52am PT
So is the universe is expanding in both space and time?

We make no distinction between space and time in terms of describing the dimensionality of the universe. It's all expanding.

So the Balloon analogy is kind of weak.
It is impossible for a human to visualize 4 dimensional expansion?


Not impossible, but it takes some thinking about, and specific examples you can work out so that when you do it in 4D (and higher) you get it.

Are the electrons, etc expanding?

Electrons have no physical extent, but that is another problem. Anything with physical extent is expanding.


Could we not just be a physicis experiment.
A simple simulation.


OK, here is a story... people thought that there was a possibility that the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) might create matter which would cause the universe to collapse into a lower energy state vacuum. In this state, the universe could be a very different place, and everything we know would be gone, including us. Think of RHIC pulling the bathtub plug and the universe as we know it draining into the lower energy state...

So I was out at BNL working on an experiment to run at RHIC and I had planned a day or two climbing in the 'Gunks ([guilt]I was out for a couple of weeks working lots of hours and felt I could get a weekend day or two during that time[/guilt]). We were up on some ledge (probably the Grand Traverse Ledge) and sitting talking with some other parties.

them: "Where are you from?"
me: "California, San Francisco Bay Area"
them: "What are you doing out east?"
me: "I'm working at Brookhaven on this experiment."
them: "So do you think that new accelerator will destroy the universe?"
me: "If it happens, it will be so quick you wont know about it."

It wasn't the answer they were expecting.

No, I don't think the universe is a physics experiment...

Is it not better to be just the village idiot?

Suit yourself.
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Jan 10, 2006 - 04:04am PT
Ed wrote:

"Karl, one of the distinguishing characteristics of a dream is that it occurs during sleep. ...

If by dreaming you mean some state of consciousness in which we create a reality which is nothing more than our thoughts, well, sure... but I doubt that dreaming the idea can be separated from the physiology of dreaming (but I am a materialist). So I don't know what would happen if I slept 1000 years and dreamt during that time... what would the dreams be like?"

Ed, one of the distinguishing charactoristics of balloons is that they are made of rubber and filled with air. If you don't try to understand, you're safe from understanding.

Just more food for thought. You have no proof at all of anything that doesn't consider this fact:

Every single bit of data you have about this world has come to you through your consciousness. Maybe this world of research and supertopo exists outside of your own awareness and maybe it doesn't and you have no way to prove it because all data is going to be filtered through your consciousness.

And no mater what happens to you in this world, a nobel prize or a hot babe or creating world peace will not make you happy if your state of mind doesn't react favorably to it. So you may or may not be interested in consciousness, but it is the singularly most precious thing to you and determines everything about your fulfillment whether you are a materialist or spiritualist.

So maybe this world is the dream of a consciousness some call God and maybe you're a dream creature in it. Maybe not. Science doesn't have the tools to know just like the boogeyman in your dreams can't know he's being dreamed either.

Let's say we want to stick with materialism for a moment. You'll postulate that energetic and chemical interactions in our brains somehow create this consciousness that lights our existence. If consciousness can exist via this kind of material interaction, who's to say that's the only way consciousness comes into existence. The energetic and chemical interplay in the fabric of the universe might breed some other vast and complex consciousness.

Not that way I think it works but just pointing out that materialism doesn't preclude a wider consciousness at play in the universe.

Peace

Karl

healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jan 10, 2006 - 07:54am PT
Rajuangeneesh,

"Anal-ogy", well as usual you're only half right but the rest of this thread is a bunch of clueless pseudo-hindu, new age, and scientific mumbo-jumbo. Anyone with even a half-ass education has taken at least one course in Klausmology and knows that infinite universes are continuously formed as Klaus farts and that they expand forever. Hell, sometimes he creates universes within universes. And yes, you live on the outside skin of one of those few "bubbles" whose constituent constants happen to be agreeable to life. This means everything what you smell today has been around since the beginning; so the next time you think life stinks, you only need to follow your nose back to the big bang to know who's ass to kiss to fix it.

Pack of friggin' fuktards...

[ P.S. And for inquiring minds that want to know what existed before the "big bang" all I can say is it involves way too much Olde E and a bunch of other sh#t you don't want or need to know about and is none of your damn business anyway. As for the origins of life; well, other than saying all the basic building blocks were "designed" in the first 10 picoseconds after the big bang it's probably another intellectual tract best left unprobed. Oh, and for you PhD's - when you fart - you aren't God and the only universe being created is a nasty mess in your drawers so pucker up. ]
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jan 10, 2006 - 11:17am PT
Karl wrote: "Just more food for thought. You have no proof at all of anything that doesn't consider this fact:

Every single bit of data you have about this world has come to you through your consciousness. Maybe this world of research and supertopo exists outside of your own awareness and maybe it doesn't and you have no way to prove it because all data is going to be filtered through your consciousness."

The fact that everything is processed through our conciousness does not preclude our understanding that and taking it into account. In fact, the emperical nature of science explicitly recognizes the limitations of our conciousness, and our senses. That is why a mathematically logical explanation is a part of understanding the measured quantities of observation. And the measurements are not subjective, but are describable and repeatable. The fact that an atomic bomb explodes cannot be explained by mass halucenation.

"And no mater what happens to you in this world, a nobel prize or a hot babe or creating world peace will not make you happy if your state of mind doesn't react favorably to it. So you may or may not be interested in consciousness, but it is the singularly most precious thing to you and determines everything about your fulfillment whether you are a materialist or spiritualist."

But if you think that the way scientists learn to think is simple, that is, subjective, then you have badly misunderstood what a scientist is. The last thing you want to waste your time on is something which you believed to be true but turned out to be wrong, false... we spend a lot of our training become skeptics and questioning authority, including our own...

"So maybe this world is the dream of a consciousness some call God and maybe you're a dream creature in it. Maybe not. Science doesn't have the tools to know just like the boogeyman in your dreams can't know he's being dreamed either. "

It is relatively easy to posit this hypothesis, and in fact by avoiding precession in what you mean you cannot prove or disprove anything, for me it is entertainment, but it ultimately has no interesting results. That is why I am not a philosopher.

"Let's say we want to stick with materialism for a moment. You'll postulate that energetic and chemical interactions in our brains somehow create this consciousness that lights our existence. If consciousness can exist via this kind of material interaction, who's to say that's the only way consciousness comes into existence. The energetic and chemical interplay in the fabric of the universe might breed some other vast and complex consciousness. "

I do not believe that your experience of conciousness is the same thing as what actually happens to you physiologically. Read Oliver Sach's Awakenings and his experience observing his patients. Another example of something I was taught, that the "brain" fills in the blind spot in your visual field. Well it turns out that the brain simply ignores the blind spot, no energy is spent "filling it in.", This is contrary to your experience of conciousness, but it is easily demonstrated to be fact. You should be skeptical that your experience of conciousness is what conciousness is.

"Not that way I think it works but just pointing out that materialism doesn't preclude a wider consciousness at play in the universe. "

Perhaps, but I suspect that "conciousness" means something very different then what you'd be willing to accept.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jan 10, 2006 - 04:26pm PT
Good grief it was a joke for god's sake, please carry on with what really is a good conversation - even a decent question from rajuangeneesh...
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Jan 10, 2006 - 05:21pm PT
Ed wrote

"You should be skeptical that your experience of conciousness is what conciousness is"

I'm absolutely skeptical about it. Thus I have spent as much time experimenting and thinking in this realm as you have in the science realm. The abstract dimensions of it are just as hard to articulate in "layman's terms" as the abstact dimensions of physics.

I did so because I'm very practical. If consciousness beyond the mind and it's physicality is essential to our existence beyond this life, then my time is well spent. If we're just meat, we're all toast in a few decades.

Science has given us a better understanding of the workings of this world but mostly used that understanding to deplete our scarce resources, pollute our environment, and give us the tools for our own wholesale destruction. Religion tempered with more science would be saner but Science is killing us much faster than religions ever could, and could use a value of wisdom rather than being the bitches of violent governments.

PEace

karl

Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jan 10, 2006 - 07:12pm PT
Science is no more killing us then the cams and ropes that you take on a climb. You decide how to use these tools, the tools themselves provide you a capability.

What you do with the capability is a choice.

However, it is difficult or impossible to do something without the capability. So I think it is hard to argue that we should not persue obtaining a capability. We should do science. We should also decide as a community what to do with the capabilities that science provides us.

Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Jan 10, 2006 - 10:27pm PT
If the people who are most intelligent devote themselves to providing the capability instead of wisdom, won't the rest of humanity abuse the capabilty?

You could give your 12 year old kids machine guns. Wise or unwise? How different than working for the government honing nukes, cruise missles and bioweapons?

I think a good separate thread would be "if we didn't persue science, what would the world look like?" also "if we didn't persue science, what would the world look like?"

That's not to say that over thousands of years we wouldn't have developed in other ways. We chose to chase science without ethics regarding the capability, and now it's only luck (or karma) that we're not all dead.

I'll start it!

Peace

Karl
WBraun

climber
Jan 10, 2006 - 10:30pm PT
"and now it's only luck (or karma) that we're not all dead."

No no there is a plan going on, you will not be able to stop it by staying here.

You have no power to drive away this mist.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jan 28, 2006 - 02:27am PT
I wrote above:

we had an early return from the Valley yesterday where I blew an aid piece (second from the ground) and hit the ground hard, fortunately my ass cheek took the blow... but I did see stars when my helmeted head accelerated to a stop... now a nice large tender bruise is forming...

and somehow Gary thought that this would be a good place to post a picture, sort of like all of the other body parts pictures floating around... this is not pretty...

as the say on the funk tracks, ouch!


Jaybro

Social climber
The West
Jan 28, 2006 - 02:34am PT
"You and I are scientists. We buy the right to experiment at the price of ultimate repsonisibility," Dr Who. (Tom Baker, the scarf, Doctor)


Hope that photo is a hematoma, and not a melanoma.
Ouch!

climber
Jan 28, 2006 - 02:41am PT
Ed, is that your ass or your head? The picture is not that definitive. :-))
hobo

climber
PDX
Jan 28, 2006 - 02:53am PT
Question(s): How fast do you walk? Relative to what? The earth? And how fast is that moving? Relative to what? The sun? And how...

Keep going, see where it leads you.

For those of you who know where it leads, dont post.

For those who dont, it can be a fun thing to do, there is a definitive final answer. Sort of.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jan 28, 2006 - 03:19am PT
Hematoma, that was the state last week, this week it is pretty much gone but for a small knot (which can hurt if it gets sit on the right way)

and my head has a lot of hair, which might lead you to suspect the same for the rest of the surface area... I probably do have more hair on my ass then most men my age have on their heads. And I have been accused of having both a fat ass and a fat head (though not usually in the same argument).

Be careful out there! that hurt big time, don't let it happen to you!
Gary Carpenter

climber
SF Bay Area
Jan 28, 2006 - 05:00pm PT
My sincere apologies to everyone on Super Topo for suggesting that Ed photograph his recent injury. He hit pretty hard on the pointed rock at the base of Church Bowl Tree. I was concerned at first because it looked like he hit his back. Fortunately it was just his "backside". I figured he had a pretty bad bruise and jokingly suggested that he post a photo. Ed asked if there were any volunteers to take the photo, none to be had in the gym that day.

So Ed, who took the photo?

Gary
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jan 28, 2006 - 05:28pm PT
Autotimer on my Ricoh GR-1, which is also a wide angle lens (28mm so I could claim it makes my ass look larger), with flash.

Debbie knew about it but wouldn't look for a couple of weeks... so I couldn't get a more flattering telephoto image and lighting.

As for the gym rats, they're all pretty light weight (even though it's SunRise) saying that they didn't want to see my bruise "in the flesh" as it were, of course I was prepared to drop-trou and show 'em all right then and there. No takers.
Jaybro

Social climber
The West
Jan 28, 2006 - 06:23pm PT
What a funny bunch, we are.

Once as a sprout, I decked ('Finally', Nautilus, Vedauwoo)on to a granite slab. Fortunatly the # nine hex on my rack broke the fall, cushioning my right nether cheek from the rock. couldn't walk right for weeks, I tired to peek, it was ugly. Avoided mirrors and cameras.

That's one bad, ass-bruise, ed.
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