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Friday, March 22, 2013

Gotye Feat. Kimbra (Mikey Mystik Galactic Gazz Remix) - Somebody That I Used to Know



Check out my remix of the 2013 Record of the Year Gotye - "Somebody That I Used to Know" Featuring Kimbra from Gotye's 2012 album Making Mirrors and see if you can decipher the sample I used to make the beat. :o)

Hint: It's just so fresh!


SALE!!! Buy two gigs and get the third free here: http://fiverr.com/mikeywrites0010/create-a-personalized-mashup-of-two-songs-of-your-choice. Pick any two of your favorite jams that you think can go together and I will mix and mash them together in a wondrous blend of musical chaos and debauchery for $5. Please have a couple of backup songs in mind in case I can't find your song or it's blocked by copyright.

Email me at mike.lapenna@gmail.com for more information.

*ALL MIXES ARE FOR PERSONAL, NON-COMMERCIAL USE ONLY* Protected under the US Fair Use Act  of 2007.


Roll on!

Monday, March 18, 2013

Dynamic awesomeness in writing, editing and creative concepts awaits! Book Michael LaPenna today!




Writing, editing, marketing, ad copy, comedy writing, help with novels, screenplays... and even greeting cards and poems for that special person in your life; it's all a part of the Michael LaPenna creative service guarantee!

I'll work within your budget to ensure you get the best value for your dollar!

For rates, questions and general inquiries, contact me here or call (845) 313-4714.

Thanks so much for your business!


Sincerely,
Mike


Learn more about my service and book me at Thumbtack.com

Saturday, March 16, 2013

Updates are coming to The Wheelchair Philosopher!


Hello folks, it's been a while—a month or more in fact. But as you know, life gets in the way of living at times. A lot of things are going on: acceleration of my business opportunities, personal adventures—and a fascination with podcasts that has seemingly overtaken the time I would take out normally for blogging on this site.

With that said, I've decided to use the Wheelchair Philosopher forum for  more of a promotional tool to accelerate my business opportunities or to pontificate on any certain issues that may arise within the disabled community (and to go "with the grain" of what might be going on in my life if you will). So stay tuned in the coming weeks for some interesting insights into a man on a roll!

Roll on!

Friday, January 25, 2013

Web company Soul Pancake asks strangers to make a friend while sitting in a ball pit



Soul Pancake is a "new media" company and website that seeks to answer big questions of our current generation in the areas of philosophy, science, religion, the arts and more by asking simple questions (in the old, if you had 24 hours to live, what would you do?" format in so many words).

As I haven't been posting very much at all  in the past two months or even longer with the ebbs and flows of my life moving about as they are, and with my new mantra of 2013 being, "Do more, live better, experience more," I thought this video only fitting. In it, a playground-esque, ball pit filled with an assortment of colored balls with larger balls with philosophical questions written on them interspersed among the balls is placed in the middle of what appears to be an urban city center. Over the pit a large banner reads, "Take a Seat & Make a Friend."


When we're young, we're taught to not talk to strangers and are warned of "stranger danger" by shows like Sesame Street and guided by our confidence in our families and neighbors to protect us from harm. But while our elders might only have our best interests in mind with regard to criminal elements, such as pedophiles, and identity thieves and the creepy guy who might put a razor blade in your candy apple at Halloween, isn't there something to be said about the idea of, "I don't know you, so I can't talk to you" being a cold and all too distancing approach for socializing and making new friends? Have we taught our children the beauty of small talk with other children? Have we taught them to recognize  a helpful adult and not just a hazardous one? More to this point, have we taught ourselves that it's okay to give a simple nod hello to somebody we make eye contact with on a given day on random street under the right circumstances? And finally, could the experiment in the video below be the start of it? Judge for yourself and of course…. Roll on!


Friday, December 21, 2012

Can money buy happiness after all?


After a much-needed hiatus from the blog world, I come to you refreshed and invigorated for the coming year. 2012 was a bit of an amazing year for me. I expanded my freelance writing business in general while also adding a new career or "micro career" as you might term it as a mashup DJ, took my friend's Feng Shui blog to a number one spot in the Google rankings and I got my first credit as a contributing editor to a self-help book (available here)—and I did all this while experiencing the joys of becoming a Mac user. (For as any Mac user can attest, Mac's are mavens of productivity which thereby gives them a special place on awesomeness lists the world over). :-)

In the interpersonal and social realms so to speak, I was able to travel a bit more: I finally was able to take a beautiful trip to Universal Studios in Orlando with my fiancĂ©e and I was also able to attend two internationally televised World Wrestling Entertainment events within a six-month period after previously never having gone to any events of such magnitude. (Seeing as I'm a lifelong fan of professional wrestling, This. Was. Epic!) Experiences such as these along with the smaller yet still poignant experiences of meeting up with Long Island relatives I hadn't seen in more than maybe three times in my whole life. made for some illumination conve I also found myself connecting and reconnecting with distant uncles and so forth at family events—family from Mexico, Italy and the Philippines (at least from a first-generation American cultural standpoint) for instance while equally expanding my willingness to say, try exotic food,  brave roller coasters, and visit niche museums in New York City, it all sums up a year that can only be described as one of my happiest ever! 

One reason I was able to do some of these things was because  of a very modest yet noticeable increase in my income that meant more money to fly to Orlando for a friend's wedding and a personal vacation, money to buy tickets to wrestling matches and money to expand my software lexicon to include a voice-activated dictation software (which I am actually using right now) and money to expand my business' productivity and even to make similar overtures in my social long-distance relationships via video chatting software such as Skype and FaceTime. So, as it turns out, in particular serendipitous instances, money and more of it has brought me a level of happiness. But in saying this, I realize it was not a particular amount of money that made me happy this year, nor was it any material gain. Rather it was that I used the money in such ways as to increase the quality of my life by increasing my quality of experiences in life with people, with ideas, with charity toward others, with clarity as to my intent and most importantly doing so with an open mind.

As the video below will show, this is not an uncommon occurrence among happy people who gain money. The premise: money can sometimes buy happiness, but the magic trick to experiencing joy is much of the time, as with most tools ilife, all in how you or I choose to use it.

More on money and happiness:


Roll on!

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

You are not so 'special' after all



Having grown up in a world in which Mr. Rodgers told me how special I was five days a week and anxiety ridden parents demand and command that their children be played more in Little League and soccer practice—a world where everyone gets a trophy for just showing up to play, the following speech is the refreshing drink of water some of us have been waiting for for the past 20 years.

Watch as a veteran high school English teacher tells his students so proudly graduating high school that they are not as special as they are so often told. In fact he says, one in a million means that there are around 7,000 people just like them. Instead, he suggests to find a way to make an impact regardless of what numbers of people might be feeling every bit as special as you on any given day.




Roll on!

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

George Carlin solves homelessness in ten minutes



George Carlin, master of comedic cacophony and effortless alliteration waxes poetic about solutions to homelessness. Among these: changing the name to "houselessness" and foregoing what he calls a useless elitist sport of golf (and until the Tiger Woods era according to Ol' Georgie, a racist sport that takes up entirely too much time and land—hundreds of acres of which, says Carlin, could be used to house the homeless). 'Tis a novel idea if I've ever heard one in my near-32 years on this spinning orb we call Earth.





Roll on!

Monday, November 5, 2012

Focus on what you DO want


Motivational Thought: Never focus on what you lack, what you fear or what you don't want in hopes to get rid of it. You won't. Rather, stay on course to thinking about what you're grateful for and what you would most love to have, to be, etc. The mind doesn't understand otherwise. It hones in on what you put into it.








Roll on!

Friday, October 26, 2012

Where do ideas really come from?




For sure, the idea is not singular, it is networked. Rather, the first idea is ill-formed and the complete idea is fully formed by the network. But the temporary ownership of the idea is essential for the idea to take hold in the world. This reinforces the idea of the narrators: people who can connect and explain the idea and communicate more or less exactly the idea as far as it can be understood by those taking an interest. In this way, the idea can take hold. -Tim Greenhalgh, YouTube user comment 


Steve Johnson takes some time in this TED talk to analyze, scrutinize and utterly break apart the notion of an idea as a single moment in time: a "eureka," a "lightbulb" or any number of terms used to suggest a singularity in concept of any particular idea. Rather Johnson argues for networked creativity wherein one idea might be borrowing from another and groups in the same way, might be cross-pollinating, if you will, with other groups.

This blog, while sometimes strong in its advocacy and championing of those with disabilities, is ultimately about championing difference as a form of unique contribution to the world and its various cultures. This video exemplifies that particular aim.



Roll on!






Wednesday, October 24, 2012

50 Things I'm Going to Do Today


This free lecture by free-thinking intellectual "shakerupper" Brian Johnson lists 50 of the most comprehensively motivating things for us, abled however we are, to do today. I agree with most of the things on this list except the whole "Stop milking the cow" part -- for I doth love me a milkshake now and again.

Listen here.

Roll on with yo' 50 things!