And so it’s worth asking: what actions – what acts of generosity or car for the world, what ambitious schemes for investments in the distant future – might it be meaningful to undertake today, if you would come to terms with never seeing the results?* Oliver Burkeman
If you’ve signed yup for way finding, forgive yourself if it takes a little (or a lot) longer. Because if we knew the right answer we’ll have found it already. That’s the hard part.** Seth Godin
… can you help?
I may need to pass this on to you, If time runs out; Not to do it the exact same way, but somehow, In your way, To keep making the gift available to whoever knows it is for them.
Spiritual maturity is largely a growth in seeing, and full seeing seems to take most of your lifetime, with a huge leap in your final years.* Richard Rohr
The world is alive, generous, and waiting patiently for us to figure it out.** Tom de Blassos
We were told by our parents, “You look with your eyes, not with your hands,” But that isn’t true – There are many ways of looking: Our looking develops our talents, And our talents grow our looking.
We are made for looking; Sometimes we get our looking wrong, But sometimes we get it very right, and we want to sing a song of joy – And when we do, it’s as though the world joins in.
Determine never to stop looking – You’ve got the look, too.
Sometimes I feel caught between two opposing selves — the “false self” imposed by society and what I would call my “true self.” How often we confuse the two and assume society’s mould to be our true self. … I saw that the entity I had taken to be “me” was really a fabrication. My true nature, I realized, was much more real, both uglier and more beautiful than I could have imagined.* Thich Nhat Hanh
When Eve saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was to be desired to make one wise, she took of its fruit and ate; and she also gave some to her Adam, who was with her, and he ate.**
Alas, there are no shortcuts to wisdom; Knowledge remains only that until we begin to live with or in spite of it.
Seeking to know ourselves is the beginning of our path to wisdom: We will not enjoy all that we discover about ourselves, for sure – There will be some enjoyable surprises, too; If we try to begin somewhere else, This is where we’ll be led back to: It’s the human condition. We call ourselves homo sapiens sapiens … which means”to taste” or “to know.” The species that knows and knows that it knows. And noe maybe we need to live ourselves into owning that name by cultivating awareness and awareness of awareness itself and let that be in some sense the guide as to what we’re going to invest in … .^
Talent is cheap – you have to be obsessed, otherwise, you are going to give up.* John Baldessari
I found myself telling him … that I felt stopped at a crossroads, looking for direction, unsure of my next steps. I told him I was beginning to feel a few icy tendrils of cynicism around what work might actually mean to most of the adult world, and with a long work life still ahead of me, I wanted to know what it took to find a life and a work such as he had found, a work into which you could really put your heart and soul.** David Whyte
If Richard Sennett is even half-right^ about how the first industrial revolution took away people’s skilful hands, and the second industrial revolution incarnated in the computer took away our skilful minds, Then AI will only compound our forfeitures.
We are meaning-making creatures, and a part of this is meaningful work to shape our days with purpose.
There’s never been a more critical time – How often have these words been spoken through history? – To identify our talents in which a deep passion resides, To notice what we are doing when we are feeling highly energised, To inscribe these things within our values, To stop waiting for someone else to dictate our story and to pen our own.
To know yourself is, above all, to know what one lacks. It is to measure oneself against Truth, and not the other way around. The first product of self-knowledge is humility.* Brother Dave
Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.** Jesus of Nazareth
Who is the most humble person in the world?
No-one knows, but they must be having a whale of a time, The grandest of adventures.
I come to this place at the beginning of the day to calm and quiet my soul, To meet with larger thoughts from greater lives – Not to become more like them or do what they do, But to become more who I am and do what I must do: Sooner or later we must distinguish between what we are not and what we are. We must accept the fact that we are not what we would like to be. We must cast of our false, exterior self like the cheap and shiny garment it is … . We must find our real self, in all its elemental poverty, but also in it great and very simple dignity … .*
Everything in my life, it seemed, had led to this point, this perfect point, poised between the unwashed white and blue of temple and sky.* Jean Houston
Joseph Campbell’s hero’s journey helps us to see that there is both an ordinary world and a special world; There is the ordinary world of catching buses and spinach between the teeth, But there is also a mythical world of meaning and significance.
Systems thinker Peter Senge informs us that there is both a reinforcing loop and a balancing loop to any system;** When there is a problem, We must go to the balancing loop to fix it – And on the brighter side, When it’s working well, It takes us to our perfect, timeless point of being and doing.
Our myth, or story, is the balancing loop for what we experience as life-in-all-its-fullness.
We connect to an inner place of wonder, and thus we are open to recognising the spirit of wonder in the world around us.* Kelvy Bird
Now there was a great wind, so strong that it was splitting mountains and breaking rocks in pieces before the Lord, but the Lord was not in the wind; and after the wind an earthquake, but the Lord was not in the earthquake; and after the earthquake a fire, but the Lord was not in the fire; and after the fire a sound of sheer silence.**
Silence and wonder, These excite me; If these were all my life were about, I would be content, I feel.
And yet there is more, For I find I must break the silence, Allow the wonder to pour into inspiration and into activity: All you have to do is write one true sentence. Write the truest sentence you know.^ Yet, I know where I must come first of all.
And no matter how hard you look, you’re almost invisible to yourself, Camouflaged by familiarity.* Verlyn Klinkenborg
When you feel the rush of fear as you put your point of view, your art, or your idea out into the world, this is not an invitation to step back into the shadows; it’s a sign that you’re at the edge, right where you should be.** Martin Amor and Alex Pellew
Do what you are passionate about: It will save you from the overfamiliar that even now is closing in around you, And will save you from those lullabies of “easy and repeat.”
Your passion reminds you that you are more than this, A Human Becoming, Journeying, never arriving, The worries and fears telling you how you are still alive.
Innovation is a collective phenomenon that happens between, not within, brains. Therein lies a lesson for the modern world.* Matt Ridley
The imagination is more like the moon than the sun because it is dependent on another thing and exists, in no pure state by itself … . It needs and openness to whatever is there at the moment and to not reject whatever is there because of any formulaic concept from the past. The imagination allows me to die a credence and an integrity to any existence outside of myself.** Michael Burkard
But it is hard to remain open to the other, Demanding and tiring, And yet we know this is where our future lies.
We might say, The heroic life involves being lost in the other: Once across [the threshold], the hero is swallowed by the unknown, be it a whale, a wolf, A sarcophagus, or a cave.^
The same is not enough for us, Something dies in us before we die, But when we press on, if we press on, then I sense we may discover life’s larger topography of grace and forgiveness and patience and love and goodness and compassion.
Notice that as soon as something around you changes, you change in response to it. You respond all the time to your environment. A lot of the time you are completely aware of these changes. In Solution Focus we make this natural process of change work for us.* Rayyya Ghul
[I]f anyone strikes you on the right cheek, turn the other also; and if anyone wants to sue you and take your coat, give your cloak as well; and if anyone forces you to go one mile, go also the second mile.** Jesus of Nazareth
Margaret Mead would keep her hate mail and use the anger she felt when rereading it in order to regain her energy when tired; She was using the letter-writer’s criticism and threat for being an agent rather than victim.
Contrast this with a university student demanding safe space, Effectively remaining a victim when really they are less fragile than they know: I was feeling bombarded by a lot of viewpoints that really go against my dearly and closely held beliefs.^
Jesus’ words perhaps have the appearance of encouraging victimisation, But on closer examination, we see the victimised taking the initiative and becoming an agent, Calling out wrongdoing with goodness – For instance, a Roman soldier demanding a Hebrew carry their pack for one mile would likely get into trouble if they accepted the offer of a second mile.
Of goodness, Iris Murdoch writes: [Good’s] existence is the unmistakable sign that we are spirit creatures, attracted by excellence and made for the good.^^
Agency uncovers talents, Notices energies, Reaches towards values … Employing them for the good.
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