Not everything blooms in spring. Your season might be autumn. Keep going.** James Clear
I think you may well find that the best is yet to come; I have a sense that life becomes stronger and fuller with the years, and this for the good of others and your own deep gladness.**
The real voyage of discovery consists not of seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes.* Marcel Proust
The more control you have over your attention, the more control you have over your future … What you trade your attention for is what your life becomes.** James Clear
There are many ways to have new eyes for seeing differently what is right in front of us – We can have slow eyes, compassionate eyes, kind eyes, curious eyes – perhaps the list grows as we see more – but here are three to begin with: what would it mean to see more humbly gratefully faithfully?^
We are not human beings having a spiritual experience. We are spiritual beings having a human experience.* Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
Research shows that a person’s past does not drive or dictate their actions and behaviours. Rather we are pulled forward by our future.** Ben Hardy
Here are life-dispositions humans are capable of choosing: We can explore existence as a spiritual being, and, We can recce the future rather than dredge the past – The two interconnect, for as we reflect on what we are capable of being – Loving, joyful, peaceable, patient, kind, gentle … We fuel our imaginations for what this may look like in the future of tomorrow or next month or a year from now, And then, We draw these into today, finding small ways, at first, to embody them for someone, somewhere.
Good stories give birth to many different meanings, generating “children” of meaning in their own image.* Dan McAdams
Meaning transforms something literal into something figurative. When you connect to something meaningful, you get perspective and purpose, but you don’t get control.** Katherine Morgan Schafler
Meaning turns that into this: the path becomes a journey, a problem presents as a challenge, an author and their book provides a guide, this pain proffers a teacher – when we understand our lives are stories, we realise how we can rewrite or overwrite these palimpsestically – Imagination playing with reality – creating something new and alive; a poor story claims there is no meaning, a not so good story acts as a time-capsule to meaning, but a good story is a baby-meaning mamma.
Leaving the work to find its own place in the world is the mark of a good workman, a good workwoman … Out of what is hidden we make the visible and then call it work; work that makes sense of the hours we are privileged to live.* David Whyte
Watch the stars in their courses and imagine yourself running with them.** Marcus Aurelius
Here are two questions that will last a lifetime: Who is my True Self? What is my work (contribution)?
Our best work will find the people who need it, and will last our lifetimes – it may not be the work we are paid for, though it may be.
The work we love, making what we see visible to others, may be a small thing in such a vast universe, but it also provides us with a journey greater than ourselves.
Culture defeats tactics every time, which is why strategy is often about creating culture.* Seth Godin
The holloways are humbling, for they are landmarks that speak of habit rather than suddenness. Trodden by innumerable feet, cut by innumerable wheels, they are records of journeys to market, to worship, to sea. Like creases in the hand, or the wear on the stone sill of a doorstep or stair, they are the consequences of tradition, of repeated action.** Robert Macfarlane
You are the smallest expression of human culture, Shaped over many years, decades of conscious or unconscious development – your holloway** resists the change you now seek, the tactics and techniques you employ; but perhaps there is a deeper holloway to discover and travel, One shaped by your talents and energies and values, fashioned from the inside out: your delightful culture, story, myth, that allows us to: wake up each day in a world of wonders rather than a world of answers.^
*Seth Godin’s This Is Strategy; **Robert Macfarlane’s The Wild Places; ‘Holloway: from the Anglo-Saxon hola weg, meaning a “harrowed path,” a “sunken road.”‘; ^Brian McLarens’ Faith After Doubt.
As is so often the case with grace, you could not have gotten to where I now was from where I had been.* Anne Lamott
The great thing, if one can, is to stop regarding all the unpleasant things as interruptions of one’s “own” or “real” life. The truth is of course that what one calls the interruptions are precisely one’s real life – the life God is sending one day by day.** C. S. Lewis
If I’m honest, I wouldn’t have planned to have arrived here: What I am doing today has a lot to do with being nudged, pushed, and pulled by things I didn’t welcome at the time, and I’m grateful.
I always admire people who marvel at things that anyone could have noticed but didn’t.* Brian Eno
The experience of touching something timeless can shock a person out of the rhythm of ephemeral experience in daily life.** Bina Venkataraman
We all notice something more than others do, It’s how we provide our lives with purpose and direction and delight, but there are some who seem to have widened their “bandwidth” exponentially – They enrich my life and motivate me to notice more; A lot of this is about time and effort and curiosity,^ but if there is anything magical about becoming a better noticer, it is that everything is useful to our original purpose and direction and delight.
We won’t be the first to have noticed what catches our attention, and, Hopefully, because we have turned our gaze towards it, We won’t be the last.
Everybody’s idea seems obvious to them … maybe what’s obvious to me is amazing to someone else? … We’re clearly bad judges of our own creations. We should put them out there and let the world decide. Are you holding back something that seems too obvious to share?^^
You must be logged in to post a comment.