#65: Writing It Out

On the Community for Change "zoom" calls over the past year, we've brought medium-sized groups together over video to discuss huge topics in a small amount of time. We figured if we shoved "racism" or "post-election divisiveness" into a room for 40 minutes and shut the door with all of us staring at each other over video from all corners of the world, we might actually get some real conversation out of it. No more beating around the bush. We're all here. We all respect one another.  So let's talk.

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#64: Family Gardening as a Guide

A giant Earthworm wiggles its way up from the ground and the kids squeal with delight. “Look at this bug!” Someone else shouts, and I feel a spritz of water on the back of my legs as someone walks by with a tilted watering can. We grab the “Good Bug, Bad Bug” book to see if we’ve got a garden friend or a garden foe. Meanwhile, Sam is munching on his fourth bowl of self-picked salad.

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#63: From a Bird's Eye

My boyfriend Chad and I spent last weekend at my sister’s apartment in downtown Brooklyn. The living room was super cozy and the bedroom walls held unique artwork from foreign places. The views were incredibly beautiful on the balcony of the 22nd floor. Despite all of that though, the most striking thing was the consciousness this elevation provided. 

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#62: I Know That I Am

While on the road last week, I did a pretty good job of meditating each night. I’ve found this is the best way to overcome both jetlag and the buzzing distraction of being on the road.

Most nights, I did one of the guided mediations on my Insight Timer app. Near the end of my trip I found a guided meditation by Zen master Thich Nhat Hahn.

“OK,” I thought, “this is going to be some serious meditation!”

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#61: Ants and Bees and Collective Consciousness

Some people (even beyond Brinton)…    love…  ants and bees… 

 

I marvel at the collective consciousness.

 

 

Ants and bees – it seems -- do have major advantages:

 

They don’t seem to suffer the downside from “politics” or “corporate ladders” or “bonus pools” or “exit strategies” or “529s” or  “remote working” or “promotions” or “work/life balance” or “face time” or “timing of vacations” or “transference overlays with authority or bosses” or “how millennials are different” or “automation”...

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#59: Finding Hygge In Our Work

I’ve just returned from a week and a half in Denmark. There, I learned about, and experienced, a Danish concept called “hygge.” Most pronunciation guides simplify the sound to hoo-ga. But it’s NOT like Chatta-NOOGA. I’d spell it phonetically as heueu-gae – where you breathe out the H, make more of an “ew” than an “oo” sound, and finish with a “gae” sound like the “ae” sound in “Michael.” In short, pronounce it like you’re pretending to be on an episode of The Californians.

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#58: Running Towards, Not Away

After a series of personally testing events my sophomore year of college, I found myself up late one night in my dorm room ignoring homework and researching schools I could potentially transfer to. When I emailed my old admissions counselor for the small college that was a close second choice to my current university, she immediately called my cell phone the next day and highly encouraged me to apply as a transfer student. Within two weeks, I received an email saying that I had been accepted. 

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#56: Daily Little Gifts

What a wonderful day to be a teacher. What a wonderful way to get to know the Earth better - through the eyes of a child. What a gift to have a boyfriend who is a wonderful father to wonderful kids - to have a glimpse of life in this role. 

 

How easy it is to get caught up in the stress of managing it all and doing it all “right” - Life that is. 

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#52: Road Makers - Thought of the Week

This week I had one thought that stayed with me all week.

When I was 16-18 years old, I knew a girl called Mira. We used to study Maths together, she knew statistics, and could explain it to me. She found me really funny - she would laugh hard- with tears coming out, and she was good looking.

When I got to 17 or 18, any girl who paid attention to me was gonna get my attention back.

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#51: Information, pleasure, and the cosmos

Neuroscientist Irving Biederman (University of Southern California) and his colleagues have identified a mechanism in human brains that leads us to one clear conclusion: we are designed to be ‘infovores’.

This is because we have a reward system that associates the release of innate opioids with acquiring new information. I have always been a very curious person, and indeed I am my happiest when I’m finding things out.

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#50: Affectionate Anarchy

I had one of those driveway moments a couple days ago—listening to Frank Oz interviewed on the New Yorker podcast about his new documentary, “Muppet Guys Talking.” Oz was the voice of iconic muppets like Miss Piggy, Fozzie Bear, Cookie Monster, Bert, Grover, and Animal. He also brought a little character called “Yoda” to life. He’s also directed a dozen or so feature films (Little Shop of Horrors, Bowfinger, The Score).

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#49: Paperclips

My sister took my awesome blender with her to her apartment in NYC while I was at college last year. She didn’t ask me if she could borrow it in the first place so I didn’t know she had it at all. The plan of leaving me out of the know would have worked out just fine for her had she not totally forgotten it under the train seat coming back from Manhattan. 

I recently told that disappointing occurrence to my boyfriend Chad. 

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#48: Hell Yes, or No

Julie Sun wrote a powerful piece about being “busy” and how, in Chinese, the word itself was a 2-part word that read separately meant “heart dying”.  At the recent Road Makers gathering, we were talking about the idea of being busy in a few of our groups.  The always wonderful and thoughtful Reed Lowenstein offered that he avoided the word “busy” because it meant someone “did it to me” rather than “doing it to myself”.

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