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Tag: research

The Cold August Winds Of Change.

The July Ultimate Blog Challenge (UBC) is done and dusted for another year. August has arrived, and in my little corner of the world, August means windy weather. Cold and wet, windy weather. And this year, the August winds have brought with them a message of change. 

UBC is designed to motivate bloggers to post a new blog on their website each day of the month. The July challenge was no different. Again, I fell short of the goal, but old habits die hard, and new habits are hard to establish. I tried. I failed. But I learned a lot in the process, and that’s what matters most.

Life Happens

My excuse is that life happens, and it is those life-happenings that are the canvas on which we create new blogs. 

July came with no shortage of life-events, and now I have plenty of empty canvases, just waiting to be filled. But the winds of change are howling around me, screaming for me to abandon this site, for a while, in order to fill the blank spaces of my Family History blog site. 

A domain name needs to reflect the theme of the website it belongs to. This website and blog, aptly named, is about me: my community, my travels, my thoughts, likes, dislikes, and my life in general. When I needed a more specific blog-site, I created Grandfather Berg.

My interest in family history centres predominantly around my paternal Grandfather, Alfred Berg, who started the Australian branch of the Berg Family, of which I am descended. Grandfather was born with a more Swedish name in Gothenburg, Sweden, in 1877, than he died with in Bankstown, Australia, in 1959.  

Because I like a challenge, my research is focussed on my Swedish side, and Grandfather deserves a website of his own because so little is known of his early life. I don’t speak Swedish, but I understand a few Swedish words that help isolate vital information from Swedish records.

When did Grandfather change his name? When and why did he leave Sweden? These questions remain unanswered but deserve my full attention. 

My Ancestors

Grandfather isn’t my only ancestor worthy of a blog, so I created the Family History Vault to capture the stories of both sides of my family. And therein lies the change that the August winds are prompting.

I fell short of the required thirty-one blogs for the July Ultimate Blog Challenge, but I managed to increase the blog-width of this site in the process. Now it’s time to abandon these pages for a while, to add to the stories that are waiting to be told on my other sites.

When I am no longer a participant in the race we call ‘life’, future generations will hopefully find a foothold in their family history search, through the stories I have written. And maybe by researching my family in general, I might unearth vital information about Grandfather’s Swedish family.

I hope that future generations won’t have to work as hard to find their ancestor’s stories as the current generation has in finding theirs. 

And that is why I will continue to research, write, and fill the pages of the Family History Vault with the stories of those who have gone before us.

Their stories must be told.

Day 16 – UBC – Is There a Cure for Earworms?

Earworms! Yuk!! What is it about a song that can make it go in one ear, and not come out the other? Where does it get stuck, and why? And who thought up the name – Earworms!?

Those songs that get trapped inside your head and keep on playing, long after you’ve turned off the radio, are called Earworms.

Wikipedia describes earworms as:

An earworm, sometimes known as a brainworm, sticky music, stuck song syndrome, or Involuntary Musical Imagery (INMI) is a catchy piece of music that continually repeats through a person’s mind after it is no longer playing. … The word earworm is possibly a calque from the German Ohrwurm.

The problem is, most of the time I don’t even like the song. And it doesn’t have to start with actually hearing the song; it could be that someone mentions the name of a song, or says a word that triggers the mechanism in my brain that turns the mental-music on. Regardless of how it starts, trying to stop it is futile.

Who Let the Dogs Out?

Buzzfeed.com has named twenty-one songs that are guaranteed to get stuck in your head. Well, I hadn’t even heard of some of those songs, so I doubt they are going to get stuck between my ears. There is one, however, that is sure to be an earworm. Say the words “Who Let the Dogs Out?”?

Now try getting THAT song to stop playing in your head. Pretty tough, hey?

Researchers have put time and money into investigating how earworms get inside your head, and why they can be hard to eradicate, once they’re tucked up, nice and snug, between your ears. Apparently, over 90% of the population suffer from earworms. That means there is a lucky 1-9% of the population enjoying an earworm free existence (how do they do that?).

Stickability of a song is dependent on things like: popularity; melodic variation; and of course, the obvious – how much time you spend listening to music.

What’s in a Name?

According to Merriam-Webster, the name, Earworm, comes from the German word, Ohrwurm. That sounds feasible. And it seems that earworms are contagious. Apparently, if you wake up in the morning with an earworm in your head, and then go about your day giving voice to the song that is haunting you, you will pass the dreaded worm on to others. I wonder if, sometime in the future, there will be a vaccine to prevent earworms? It seems there is a vaccine for everything else – why not earworms?

So, what is the cure for earworms?

Dr Kelly Jakubowski (Durham University) has spent a lot of research hours trying to figure out the how and why of earworms.

According to Durham University, and based on Dr Jakubowski’s research, there are a few things you can do to eradicate earworms. The University suggests:

  • distraction – by thinking of another song: I can see the danger in this one. In my case, the replacement song will simply kick the original earworm out and elect itself as King Earworm. Durham University actually cites ‘God Save the Queen’ as a safe replacement. I have to admit, I haven’t tried this, but I think it has merit.
  • engaging with the song – sing along with it; listen to it; whatever it takes to get up-close-and-personal with the earworm that has taken up residence in your head. I’m not sure how this works, but who am I to question the research?
  • leaving it alone – not engaging with it – thinking of something else. My guess is the earworm will feel very lonely and go off in search of someone else’s head to live in – someone who might at least pay them some attention.

It seems that for most of us, earworms are inevitable, so I hope the information I have shared with you today makes them a little easier to live with.

Have an earworm-free day!, or, if you have to have them, may they be songs you love – or at least like!

What’s Your Earworm?

What songs get stuck in your head?

Are your earworms – songs that you like – or not?

How do you get rid of those annoying earworms that just won’t shut up!?

Share your thoughts in the Comments box below

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