Frazz by Jef Mallett for December 04, 2012
Transcript:
Mrs. Olsen: Any questions? Caulfield: Why do we get excited about the first robin of spring but we never get depressed about the last robin before winter? Mrs. Olsen: Ignorance is bliss. Caulfield: Then she forgot all about her lesson plan! Frazz: I bet that made people happy.
Varnes almost 12 years ago
So what did they do for the rest of the hour?
runar almost 12 years ago
One of my grade school teachers was a nun in her 70s who used to fall asleep in class. We let her, then someone would “accidentally” drop a book and wake her up in time for the bell.
RonaldDavis almost 12 years ago
… because of the strange asymmetry of time by which we can remember the past but not the future. We know when we see the first robin that it is the first, but not when we see the last robin. There is no full explanation of that asymmetry, but I think it’s because the Big Bang imposes a boundary condition on the Schrödinger equation of the Universe. An analogy is that we perceive an asymmetry between up and down, but that is only because we live on the surface of a body, and not an inherent feature of space.
jessegooddoggy almost 12 years ago
I am very happy when I see the first white crowned sparrows in the fall (they have a lovely song and sing all winter!), and sad when I am down to the last one or two in the spring.
pumaman almost 12 years ago
And coincidentally, the last robin was in the last place I looked.
wwh85cp almost 12 years ago
“forgot about her lesson plan?”
Hmmm. Perhaps she saw a teachable moment there, as in, “I just learned this kid drives me NUTS!”
Sheryl D. Johnson almost 12 years ago
Towards is the direction of the net force of gravity. There is no down or up.
doctorwho29 almost 12 years ago
It’s a miracle. One of his questions worked!
hippogriff almost 12 years ago
Around here, robins are always around. The sign of spring is when mockingbirds start their territorial routine of elaborate song punctuated by sudden aerobatics.
SkyFisher almost 12 years ago
“do to limitations”I think you mean “due to”.I know what a stickler you are for spelling.
lynnskay almost 12 years ago
Yes, you may dare that observation. It sounds accurate to me.
hippogriff almost 12 years ago
big puma: Anyone making careful charts is an ornithologist – whether they do it for a living or not.
DKHenderson 10 days ago
You never know when the last robin you see is the last…but you note the first one you see after a long time without them.