Smug, or what . . .
Tim Dowling writes a hilarious piece on the demise of his car. But really, it’s about so much more. The best bit? When the car can be resuscitated no more, when he’s worrying about how to get home, when he’s thinking about the challenges of buying a new vehicle, and his wife dares to say, “Come… Read More Smug, or what . . .
Speaking up . . .
Had a good week at work? Determined that next week will be even better? Maybe this will help: In her new book, The Skills, Mishal Husain says: Thank you Mishal. Loving your style.
Out of the shade . . .
“We may believe that it’s the quality of the sunset that gives us such pleasure, but in fact it is the quality of our own immersion in the sunset that brings the delight.” Ayya Khema
So write . . .
Coco Khan writes eloquently about a time when she can “go back to skipping through life and eating memes for breakfast.” Leaving aside, just for the moment, the context she wrote that in . . . What wonderful words. How beautifully optimistic. It’s a state to be desired.
Making your mark . . .
“Do not go where the path may lead, go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.” Ralph Waldo Emerson
On their way out . . .
Herman Melville suggests some good reads for helping us to deal with “noxious colleagues.” He says: “Toxic colleagues are the worst. But they may be a feature of the workplace environment rather than a bug.” Let’s hope they’re a dying breed.
Seeing it clearly . . .
“Work is love made visible… And what is it to work with love? It is to sow seeds with tenderness and reap the harvest with joy, even as if your beloved were to eat the fruit.” Kahlil Gibran
Working towards . . .
Tim Lomas writes about the word areté – a Classical Greek term about fulfilment of potential and purpose. He uses it in the context of a story about himself … As a teenager, he longed to ‘make it’ as a musician. He subsequently started a band, and continued to play throughout university, and remembers many great adventures… Read More Working towards . . .
Which way to turn . . .
“I was just rather fascinated by certain what seemed to me insoluble paradoxes about reflection, about what it was like to look in one direction and see in another. I was struck by the strange capability we have to look through the front window of a motor car and at the same time look through… Read More Which way to turn . . .
