Saturday, June 20, 2026

 BEAVER DAMS IN THE STREAM OF CONSCIOUSNESS

Because "stream of consciousness" is a metaphor coined by psychologist William James, "dams" within this context represent the psychological barriers, restrictive thought patterns, and emotional suppressions that hinder the natural flow of our awareness. [1, 2, 3]
The roles these dams play vary depending on whether you are looking at it through a psychological, physiological, or literary lens:
1. Psychological & Emotional "Dams"
In therapy and everyday cognition, the brain is often compared to a dam. During stressful events, you may "dam up" your emotions to keep it together and get through the trauma. [1]
  • The Dam Break: Once the stressor ends and you feel psychologically safe, the dam bursts, resulting in an outpouring of pent-up feelings, often experienced as a delayed stress reaction. [1]
  • Thinking Arrows: Some psychologists describe automated or predicted judgments—such as automatically expecting a presentation to fail or making assumptions in conversations—as rigid "thinking arrows" that act as psychological dams to block new experiences. [1]
  • Egoic Obstructions: Spiritual teachings suggest that the conscious "self" acts as a constructed dam. When you release this self-created damming, the river of life flows free and unfiltered. [1]
2. The Physiological Dam
In some contemporary neuro-philosophy, the physical body itself is viewed as the "dam" that holds together your conscious experience of the world. It provides the necessary boundaries that allow your subjective life (the lake) to exist without dissipating into the physical environment. [1]
3. Literary "Dams"
When writers use the stream-of-consciousness narrative technique—popularized by authors like James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and William Faulkner—the words mimic the nonlinear, chaotic, and associative way our brains actually work. In this style, "dams" are the structural breaks: [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • Lack of Punctuation: Sarty’s thoughts in William Faulkner's Barn Burning, or Leopold Bloom's internal monologues in Ulysses, frequently omit traditional punctuation and clear transitions to simulate a free-flowing flood of thought. By intentionally ignoring these conventional "dams," writers allow readers direct access to a character's unfiltered psyche. [1, 2, 3, 4]
To learn more about the psychology behind how the brain processes these mental barriers, you can explore the insights provided on the American Psychological Association or find articles on the University of Oregon's literary guides.

 Hudson Strode House Strode House - Wikipedia

49 Cherokee Rd - Google Maps

Hudson Strode: Starring As Himself - YouTube

Hudson Strode 1892-1976 Hudson Strode - Wikipedia

Hudson Strode - Encyclopedia of Alabama

Al Sella 1919-2013 Alvin Sella Obituary - Tuscaloosa, AL

Former art professor, Alvin Sella, dies at 93 – The Crimson White

Marcel Smith 1934-2019 Edgar Smith Obituary - Nashville, TN

Jack Warner 1917-2017         About Jack Warner - Warner Foundation

Jonathan Westervelt Warner – The Alabama Business Hall of Fame | The University of Alabama

Tuscaloosa icon Jack Warner dies at 99

Wayne Greenhaw 1940-2011 Wayne Greenhaw - Wikipedia

Wayne Greenhaw - Encyclopedia of Alabama

Thomas Rountree 1927-1992 Alabama Authors » Blog Archive » ROUNTREE, THOMAS JEFFERSON, 1927-1992

Sue Walker  1940-   Sue Brannan Walker - College of Education

Sue Brannan Walker - Wikipedia

Camille Elabash 1925-1923 Camille Maxwell Elebash Obituary (2023) - Tuscaloosa, AL - Tuscaloosa Memorial Chapel Funeral Home, Memorial Park, and Crematory

Thomas Turner 1927-2012 Thomas Coleman “Tom” Turner (1927-2012) - Find a Grave Memorial

Elise Sanguinetti 1926-2014 Elise Ayers Sanguinetti - Encyclopedia of Alabama

Starr Smith 1917-2012 Vernon Smith Obituary - Ridgeland, MS

Harry Mabry 1932-2004 Harry Mabry - Wikipedia

Harry Mabry - Bhamwiki

Jewel Hudgins 1919-2010 Jewel Hudgins Obituary - Tuscaloosa, AL

John Forney 1926-1997  John McLaughlin Forney (1927-1997) - Find a Grave Memorial

 Throwback Thursday: Alabama Legend John Forney

Y.D. Lott 1939-2024 Yancy Lott Obituary - Mobile, AL

Scott Hunter 1947-  Scott Hunter (American football) - Wikipedia

Scott Hunter - Alabama Sports Hall of Fame



Friday, June 19, 2026

 The concept of a "stream of consciousness" with "unimpeded process integration" refers to systems or cognitive states that allow information, thoughts, or tasks to flow continuously without interruption, bottlenecks, or cognitive friction. [1, 2]

Depending on your context, this concept applies to either software systems or human cognitive performance.
1. In Systems & Architecture (Software/Data)
In data engineering and enterprise architecture, it represents event-driven pipelines where data is continuously ingested, processed, and routed without needing to stop and wait for "batch" updates.
  • Actionability: This is typically achieved using stream processing frameworks like Apache Kafka or Apache Flink.
  • Result: It enables real-time analytics, instantaneous fraud detection, and zero-latency data synchronization across a business. [1, 2, 3]
2. In Psychology & Productivity (Human)
In cognitive science, "unimpeded process integration" in a stream of consciousness implies reaching a "flow state" (or being "in the zone"). [1, 2]
  • The Mechanism: The brain integrates ancient processing centers with the frontal cortex, syncing brain waves to allow intuitive action without the obstruction of discursive thoughts or self-conscious interference.
  • Result: Extreme focus, intrinsic reward, and maximum cognitive output. [1, 3]
3. In Literature & Creative Writing
In fiction, it refers to a narrative style meant to mirror the exact, unfiltered flow of a character's mind. [1]
  • The Mechanism: Indirect interior monologue lets ideas, memories, and sensory inputs bleed into one another without traditional, rigid sentence structures.
  • Famous Examples: Works by authors like Virginia Woolf (e.g., Mrs. Dalloway) and James Joyce (e.g., Ulysses). [1, 2, 3, 4]

Thursday, June 18, 2026

  My ideas for filling out the form.

The size of the donation depends on how many yearbooks ADAH wants. This collection contains approximately 300 yearbooks of which approximately 250 are of Alabama origin and most of the rest come from surrounding states. The dates of these yearbooks range from 1896 to 2014.

The collection also contains hundreds of envelopes, letters and postcards of Alabama origin. The dates of this material ranges from the 1840s to the 1950s.


LEE PAKE, JR.'S ALABAMA ARCHIVES:

180 volumes of the Corolla, the yearbook of the University of Alabama. Most of these are large 12 inch by 9 inch by 2 inch books. This collection contains only a few volumes of early Corollas: 1896, 1901, 1902 and 1908. The collection contains volumes from almost all the years from 1915 until 2014 with as many as 4 copies of some years.

51 volumes of the Black Warrior, the yearbook of Tuscaloosa High School from 1911 until 1979. Most of these are smaller 11 inch by 8 inch by less than one inch. Most of the volumes from the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s are in this collection with as many as 4 copies of some years.

5 copies (1927, 1928,1929, 1932, 1933) of the Dryad, the yearbook of Tuscaloosa Junior High School 

3 copies (1954, 1966, 1967) of the Stillmanite, the yearbook of Stillman College.

3 copies (2-1925, 1947) of the Mirror, the yearbook of Birmingham's Phillips High School.

1940 volume of the Miana, the yearbook of Marion Institute.

1948 volume of the Southern Accent, the yearbook of Birmingham Southern College

1904 volume of Meh Lady, the yearbook of Mississippi College for Women in Columbus.

1917 volume of Techala, the yearbook of the Montevallo Alabama Girls Industrial School.

approximately 70 more uninventoried yearbooks from Alabama and other Southern States.



The size of the donation depends on how many yearbooks ADAH wants. This collection contains approximately 300 yearbooks of which approximately 250 are of Alabama origin and most of the rest come from surrounding states. The dates of these yearbooks range from 1896 to 2014.


2 large folders filled with postcards from Alabama towns from A to Z.
Camden postcards

Anniston postcards



 One folder filled with World War 1 and World War 2 postcards and correspondence of Alabama origin
.


10 large 3 inch thick folders containing mostly old Alabama postcards in plastic protectors. For example, the folder dedicated to Montgomery postcards contains 375 postcards. 2 large folders are filled with only old uninventoried Mobile and Birmingham postcards.
Montgomery postcards


BIRMINGHAM POSTCARDS


MOBILE POSTCARDS
1906 MOBILE HURRICANE POSTCARDS
EARLY FAIRHOPE POSTCARDS AND CORRESPONDENCE.

Uninventoried albums and boxes filled with Alabama postmarked postal covers. One of these albums contains only Bryce (Alabama Insane) Hospital postal covers and related documents. Another of these albums contains the following rare Alabama postmarks from these dates: Cottondale (1908), Belle Sumter (1910), Jachin (1909), Montevallo (1907), Samantha (1908), Luverne (1907), Phifer (1910), Mexia (1909), Hatchechubbee (1910), West Blocton (1903), Kellyton (1909), Opelika (1906), Waverly (1908), Clio (1914), Buhl (1908), Newtonville (1909), Speigner (1910), McConnells (1909), Coffeeville (1860), Coatopa (1907), Summerfield (1884), Centreville (1884), Patsburg (1909), Perryville (1910), Maylene (1910), Minter (1905), Hayneville (1894), Faunsdale (1894), Suspension (1880), Cubahatchee (1913) and Gainestown (1920). These envelopes, letters and postcards range from the 1840s until the 1950s.




 

Uninventoried Alabama related photographs, art objects and maps.

 Warehouse

THE YARD







UPSTAIRS






NORTH END DOWNSTAIRS











 
MIDDLE FLOOR














SOUTH END DOWNSTAIRS