






Though I do not believe that a plant will spring up where no seed has been, I have great faith in seed. Convince me that you have a seed there, and I am prepared to expect wonders.*
Henry David Thoreau
If you keep telling people who they are, who their best selves are, if you keep reminding them of their true identity, there’s a good chance they’ll figure out what to do.
Rob Bell
It’s a staggering thought:
The mighty sequoia is contained within a tiny seed, just
waiting to germinate;
No less staggering is what lies within
you,
Waiting.
*Austin Kleon’s blog: What does a seed look like?;
**Rob Bell’s What is the Bible?

Without a name made in our mouths, an animal or place struggles to find purchase in our minds or our hearts.*
Tim Dee
Bring light to all that is overcast.**
Plotinus
Words help us understand
and enable us to share;
The words of others have been light for us,
So that we might not only see, but also
know, and we can
be light to others:
Words make worlds.^
*Robert Macfarlane’s Landmarks;
**John O’Donohue’s Divine Beauty;
^Krista Tippett’s Becoming Wise.

I would not give a fig for the simplicity on this side of complexity, but I would give my life for the simplicity on the other side of complexity.*
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Our life experience will equal what we pay attention to.**
William James
Some people lead simple lives,
not daring to enter its complexity;
Others enter into complexity and, becoming lost,
Become trapped or overwhelmed;
But some enter and, focusing on what gives them
energy and joy, emerge into a
life-in-all-its-fullness,
Their guide for entering complexity
and emerging
many more times,
Each time the richer.
*Krista Tippett’s Becoming Wise;
**Rob Walker’s The Art of Noticing.

Pay attention.
Be astonished.
Tell about it.*
Mary Oliver
What we imagine to be aesthetic preferences are really survival instincts honed over millennia, instincts that helped us find promising place to forage and rest.**
Annie Murphy Paul
It is likely that whilst you read this,
You are surrounded by the harsh, straight lines or
perfect circles
of human inventions.
Beyond our walls, another world calls to us;
Listen to it in birdsong,
Here and here.
Contact with the natural world releases
oxytocins in us, reducing anxiety, yet
we must also recognise that we have adapted too well
to unnatural surroundings, even
leaving some people over-anxious when in nature; as
Viktor Frankl has pointed out:
he retains a freedom,
the human freedom to adapt to his fate,
his environment,
in one way or another^.
We can do this life, but
it’s better with some deep nature in it.
*Rob Walker’s The Art of Noticing;
**Annie Murphy Paul’s The Extended Mind;
^Viktor Frankl’s Yes to Life.

Each of the projects described in this book has at its centre something drawn by hand.*
Quentin Blake
A positive thing that can come from anxiety is that it can be a sign that some things in your life, and in you, are out of alignment and need addressing.**
Kate Sutton
Quentin Blake’s words form the opening sentence
in the third book I’ve picked up from the illustrator
so far this year –
If you’ve ever read one of Roald Dahl’s tales then
you’ll know Blake’s work.
“Something drawn by hand”
feels like a very healthy thing to do,
Proffering a joining of our inside and outside worlds
when the rush and noise of 21st century life
refuses us rest and reflection.
I’d also picked up a copy of
Kate Sutton’s Drawing on Anxiety, a journal
in which Sutton encourages drawing in a mindful way:
Drawing calls for us to be more present,
it allows the flow state, and to fully focus on the
task at hand, which can be ever so soothing.**
Here are some some of her examples: draw
the things you find yourself doing when
unhappy and anxious, and
the things that make you feel calm, draw
the things you hold tightly on to, and
the things you would do if you weren’t afraid.
Draw nature taking on a city, the
things that help you sleep better, the
things that help you in the morning, draw
your inner critic, and
some things your body has told you.
This assumes that
everyone can draw –
And we can –
It’s just that many of us gave up at
a very early age; Lynda Barry asks:
How old do you have to be
to make a bad drawing?^
How old were you?
We wrongly think that some can draw whilst
most cannot, but
drawing is more about seeing than drawing,
Being present, paying attention, being led into
a larger world.
Don’t draw complicated,
Draw simple (I call it doodling) –
I love Blake’s images because they are uncomplicated, yet
full of life.
Here’re are a couple of things to be playful with:
Take a number of objects out of your cutlery drawer and
draw them as simply as possible;
Search for “images of Quentin Blake” on your browser,
Choose some images you really like and simply copy them.
Now to find some words:
Before writing and drawing were separated
they were conjoined.^
I enjoy illustrating life with doodles and words –
Even taking unhelpful thoughts and feelings, and
doing something different with them, something more, so
here’s a third thing to try:
Re-member an unhelpful thought –
This’ll never work,
You’re rubbish at this,
What a mess you’ve made,
You don’t belong here;
The internal critic is trying to protect us, but
in a really unhelpful way,
So we’re going to provide some help by
inserting a word
(or replacing negative words like “never” and “don’t”) from
the following list:^^
(Self) Awarely
Bravely
Confidently
Determinedly
Energetically
Fearlessly
Gratefully
Helpfully
Imaginatively
Joyfully
Kindly
Limitlessly
Motivationally
Nobly
Perseveringly
Quirkily
Respectfully
Strongly
Thoughtfully
Uniquely
Vibrantly
Worthily
eXeptionally
Youthfully
Zealously.
When we play with our sample thoughts, they become:
This’ll work vibrantly,
You’re fearlessly rubbish at this,
What a thoughtful mess you’ve made,
You bravely belong here.
Create a picture to go with your sentence – perhaps
something a la Blake, and maybe
add a little colour, too.
Notice what happens as you do this, as
you playfully and imaginatively
illustrate your life.
*Quentin Blake’s Beyond the Page;
**Kate Sutton’s Drawing on Anxiety;
^Lynda Barry’s Making Comics;
^^Borrowed from Mourad Diouri’s I am ….

And the message of all these stories, the secret our poets and philosophers have been trying to tell us for centuries, is that our longing is the great gateway to belonging.*
Susan Cain
As soon as humans had completed the evolutionary process, they found that a longing for transcendence was built into their condition.**
Karen Armstrong
Our lives came with an ample supply of
longing.
Longing never runs out;
We may bury it or misplace it,
But we’re never far away from our
inward longing –
Who is my True Self? – and our
outward lining –
What is my Contribution?
*Susan Cain’s Bittersweet;
**Karen Armstrong’s A Short History of Myth.

It is the limits that make it interesting, the limits that give us an edge to the box, something to leverage against. *
Seth Godin
*Seth Godin’s blog: Limitless.

Genre is a box, a set of boundaries, something the creative person can leverage against. The limits of the genre are the place you can do your idiosyncratic work.*
Seth Godin
*Seth Godin’s The Practice.

we propose we need not time management but timelessness*
Maggie Berg and Barbara Seeber
*Maggie Berg and Barbara Seeber’s The Slow Professor.
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