That weird little thing

But that working within the limits of your moment in history, and your finite time and talents, you actually got round to doing – and made life more luminous for the rest of us by doing – whatever magnificent task or weird little thing it was you came here for.*
Oliver Burkeman

When we open ourselves to the world and pay homage to that which is larger than ourselves, we receive a blessing from the outer world. We get something back. We are ourselves enriched by the larger understanding of the cosmos and our place in it.**
Alan Lightman

I leave the magnificent task for others –
Maybe for you,
Mine is the weird little thing –
Small, bespoke, boutique;
Opening one’s self to the greater world is
a good place to begin,
To be able to notice what others do not and
to lean into what is more noticeable than other things –
And at first, we may not even know why,
But we must bring it into the world,
Not to everyone, but those who will know
it is for them.

*Oliver Burkeman’s Four Thousand Weeks;
**Alan Lightman’s The Transcendent Brain.

Make sure you read the small print

Dignity flows from agency, allowing us to be treated as humans, not cogs.*
Seth Godin

When people truly discover some aspect of their vision and have the opportunity to dedicate themselves to working on it, when they can tell the truth and focus on aspirations instead of on “being less bad,” when they can be themselves, then something changes.**
Peter Senge

Some know from an early age what they want to do with their lives,
Others come to what it is they must do later –
I wanted to be a hairdresser on leaving school, but only lasted three months;
A few years later,
I wanted to be a Methodist Church minister, and this lasted for decades,
But this wasn’t it, there was still something I wanted to be –
I didn’t know what it was and I didn’t have a name for it;
I have since come to call it dreamwhispering,
Because it’s about hearing and
uncovering the hopes and purpose people have for their lives –
It’s the small print to everything I write and doodle;
It’s not a cog-description, and we all have one of these
I-don’t know-what-it-is-and-I-don’t-have-a-name-for-it things,
And they’re all wildly and wonderfully different,
We can’t lay them down at retirement –
They are what we are, and we are what they are.

To live fully, experiencing each moment, aware, alert, and attentive. We are here, each one of us, to write our own story – and what fascinating stories we make.^

*Seth Godin’s The Song of Significance;
**Peter Senge’s The Necessary Revolution;
^Madeleine L’Engle, from Victor Strecher’s Life on Purpose.

For times like these

We too are always falling … spinning into someplace new and unexpected. Despite our fear of falling, the gifts of the world stand to catch us.*
Robin Wall Kimmerer

Without mythic keys we have neither culture nor religion, no art, architecture, drama, ritual, epic, social customs, or mental disorders. We would have only a grey world, with little of anything calling us forward to that strange and beautiful country that recedes even as we try to civilise it.**
Jean Houston

When we are lost, or in a place
we do not want to be,
Our stories will guide us.

Whilst we are surrounded by stories,
The most important one is
that which forms at the centre of our lives.

A story for honour, nobility, and enlightenment
will never fail us, or others –
And if we are dismayed by our story, we can reform it.^

*Robin Wall Kimmerer’s Braiding Sweetgrass;
**Jean Houston’s A Mythic Life;
^Let me know if I can help; this is what my work of dreamwhispering is about.

Ongoing

My hunger for freedom is my hunger for myself, my hunger for my creative initiative.*
M. C. Richards

The less you desire, the richer you are, the freer you are, the more powerful you are.**
Ryan Holliday

It’s about desiring the right things;
When we have less desire for the wrong things,
We find we have more desire for the right things
(especially the thing we want to be remembered for) –
I put it this way because it’s not
once-and-for-all, but, rather,
Ongoing.

Marginalising the ego, abandoning it to the circumference, is a way of entering the soul. In fact it might be more accurate to say that marginalising the ego is precisely the work of the soul.^

*M. C. Richards’ Centering;
**Ryan Holiday’s Discipline is Destiny;
^James Carse’s Breakfast at the Victory.

A time to sow

(I found this in my drafts folder from around three years ago, so I thought to sow it here)

Beauty does not linger, it only visits. Yet beauty’s visitation affects us and invites us into its rhythm, it calls us to feel, think and act beautifully in the world: to create and live a life that awakens the beautiful.*
(John O’Donohue)

what do you want to say?  Why does it need to be said?  What if you could say it in a way that has never been done?  How might you do that?**
(Warren Berger)

The beauty you long to see may well be held within the seed you are holding in your mind, your heart and your hand.

It looks like nothing at all but if you plant it then you may be surprised.

(*From John O’Donohue’s Divine Beauty.)
(**From Warren Berger’s A More Beautiful Question.)

Learning ourselves

Education is personal or it is nothing.*
Sir Ken Robinson

A creative person. Initiating, enacting. Using their lifetime to find their original face, to awaken their own voice, beyond all learning, habit, thought. When the human community finally knows itself, it will discover that it lives at the centre. People will be artists in their life and labour.**
M. C. Richards

From the Latin educare and the Old English educere,
Respectively led out and lead out,
Education is all about us,
What we have and what we lack,
We are learning ourselves –
You are a place of endless discovery;
Of course, this is only half the tale:
If you only focus on you, you will max you out.
If you focus on others, there will always be more^

We are surrounded by moving, breathing libraries
and universities –
Together with the wonderful world inhabit,
Making it possible to endlessly continue our education:
The Greeks thought that every person had an inner daimon
and that we should find and live in harmony with it.^^

And this, so we might make
our contribution.

*Ken Robinson’s Out of Our Minds;
**M. C. Richards’ Centering;
^Gabe Anderson’s You Max You Out;
^^Victor Strecher’s Life on Purpose.

Art and story

Art is the human act of doing something that might not work and causing change to happen. Work that matters. For people who care. Not for applause, not for money. But because we can.*
Seth Godin

We didn’t invent story; we discovered it. It was already there because it is the lens through which our brain analyses everything.**
Lisa Cron

We might erroneously believe that some people produce art
whilst others are more practical, and
some of us are into stories
whilst others get on with reality,
But your existence as high-functioning creatures
depends on these;
Story helps us to make sense of everything,
Art is our desire to live life as
embellishment for others –
If what we do makes the world better and
brings in the future,
If it can be continually reimagined and developed,
And gives us joy and fulfilment,
Then we’re likely feeling our art.


*Seth Godin’s The Practice;
**Lisa Cron’s Story or Die.

Voyagers

Each of us is a voyager. This is what the universe invites us to be in our lives and relationships, because the universe keeps changing, unfolding, evolving.*
Philip Newell

When we get to where we’re going … perhaps we should stop. Unless the going was the point.**
Seth Godin

Some are aware of the journey the universe is taking them on
and are exhilarated, others are unaware,
The movement through space and seasons being too subtle for them to notice;
As cognisant expressions of the cosmos,
It must take a lot of effort to remain motionless and
emotionless –
Better to put all that effort to the service of
openness:
I believe that the capacity for awe
also includes an openness to the world.
Openness in turn, requires a certain humility.
To be open to the world is to recognise
there are things in the world that we do not yet possess,
things bigger than us,
things that we do not yet understand
(or perhaps may never understand).^

*Philip Newell’s Sacred Earth, Sacred Soul;
**Seth Godin’s blog: When we get to where we’re going
;
^Alan Lightman’s The Transcendent Brain.

Do the hustle*

This is the song of significance. This is what motivates people to do the work that can’t be automated, mechanised, or outsourced. And this is the song that humans yearn to sing together.**
Seth Godin

For I know no trouble in life which does not stand as a counterpoint to some positive capacity.^
M. C. Richards

It’s possible to see each technological revolution as taking more than it has given:
The Industrial Revolution taking the skill of our hands,
The computer revolution, that of our brains,
And AI, our innovation and creativity,
Or maybe, each urges us to up our game;
There’ll always be some trouble towards which we can
orientate our “great capacity” –
Our hustle is our best, our delight, our fulfilment:
If you’re not a person who hustles,
who are you?
Where does that leave the people
counting on you …
Hustle because we care.
Because we care about the game.
Because we care about the cause.^^

Victory Frankl offers us a delightful exhortation for an AI world:
We are unrepeatedly and irreplaceably imperfect,*^
And we need you to bring your hustle.

*You may want to enjoy Van McCoy’s The Hustle as a soundtrack to this post;
**Seth Godin’s The Song of Signficance;
^M. C. Richards’ Centering;
^^Ryan Holiday’s Discipline is Destiny;
*^Viktor Frank’s Yes to Life.