Most Popular Content
Today's:
- How to Use the "Directory of Seeds and Plants"
- Entering El Salvador
- How to Make Virgin Coconut Oil With Milyn and Peter Christopher
- History Of Cinquera in El Salvador
- Cutting Through Internet Misinformation About Nicaragua By Pronicaragua And Other "Sources"
- Gringo Land Speculators In Nicaragua Are Sandinista Apologists
All time:
- How to Use the "Directory of Seeds and Plants"
- How to Make Virgin Coconut Oil With Milyn and Peter Christopher
- Entering El Salvador
- Cutting Through Internet Misinformation About Nicaragua By Pronicaragua And Other "Sources"
- Cost of Living in Nicaragua
- Funny, Odd Sayings
- Gringo Land Speculators In Nicaragua Are Sandinista Apologists
- Farms for Volunteer / Homestay / WWOOF in Nicaragua
- Five Months in Uvita, Costa Rica: A Summary
- What is the REAL truth about buying property in Nicaragua and Costa Rica?
- Coconuts Need Salt: Fertilize Them With Salt or Seawater!
- Vaccination Requirements in Costa Rica
- Are Some Central America Forums Less Impartial Than Meets The Eye?
- Encouraging Innocence Abroad in Nicaragua and Costa Rica
- A Fantastic Day in Paradise
- Real Estate Problems in Nicaragua - Confiscations, Sandinista Squatters, and Original Owner Rage
- Conozca cómo Daniel Ortega preparó el fraude electoral
- Monkey Pulling The Turnip leads to Costa Rica
- Finding a House-sitter or Caretaker Opportunity in Central America
- Online Resources About Central America
Thanks for your feedback
Yes, I agree that it's generally true that most people who get degrees lose the ability for original thought in the process, so it is indeed a miracle that I wrote those words after that experience.
If only I had removed all the complex ideas, original philosophising, counterintuitive conclusions, and clever constructions, I might have come up with a paper that flowed so well even a college graduate could understand it.
Maybe I should go to graduate school so I could definitively sever my brain from reality and fully embrace the nanny doctrine?