What might happen in the tea room . . .
You don’t need to understand the nuances of chemical shift anisotropy (I don’t) to understand the message here. Sir Peter Mansfield talks about “the birth of the MRI” . . . “In those days coffee and tea breaks were taken in the tea room of the Physics Department. It was an opportunity for members of… Read More What might happen in the tea room . . .
Use it wisely . . .
Driving to work, listening to the radio, I heard someone suggest that our lives are a gift, and that we’re each accountable for using that gift in the best way that we can. And I loved it when the speaker of this idea suggested “our work colleagues” as one of the groups of people we… Read More Use it wisely . . .
Right again . . .
I complained to my husband that something he said to me made me feel bad. He pointed out that the problem was not the way he said it but the meaning I chose to infer. I do so hate it when he makes a good point.
Stay hungry . . .
“Anyone who lost track of time when using a computer knows the propensity to dream, the urge to make dreams come true and the tendency to miss lunch.” Tim Berners-Lee
Owning up . . .
Today Right now If you made that decision you’ve been longing to make If you took control If you made a choice What’s the worst that could happen?
Take note . . .
“To pay attention, this is our endless and proper work” (Mary Oliver)
Reflecting on texting …
I know that some of us (me included at times) can be critical of text messaging as a means of communication – especially with someone we really know well. Why wouldn’t we just talk to them face to face, or ring them? Well, for all the obvious reasons – and I don’t need to submit… Read More Reflecting on texting …
Not always obvious . . .
“Sometimes it is the people no one imagines anything of who do the things that no-one can imagine.” Alan Turing
Tapping your potential . . .
“That brain of mine is something more than merely mortal; as time will show.” Ada Lovelace
