• 23May

    There are two habits that contribute a great deal to my overall happiness.  One is to listen very careful to the INTENT of someone who is speaking. The other is not to get too tied up in semantics.  I belong to a very active online community based on the craft of knitting. Not surprisingly, most of its members are women.  In that context, this comment was recently posted in one of the forums:

    Okay. Here it is, the 21st century. I’m an adult female human being. I’m a woman, dammit, not a girl, or a gal (whatever that is). I’m a lady only in certain social situations. Outside those very particular situations, I’m a woman. And so are my colleagues and compatriots who are also adult female human beings. Dammit.

     This rant is brought on by hearing adult women calling each other “girls” or “gals” or “ladies.” Girls wear little green uniforms and sell cookies. I don’t know what gals are. Ladies are women of a particular social class, in situations where social class matters. And my life in general involves neither cookies nor situations where social class matters. Whether we’re born to silk or to scraps, we’re all here to do the same thing: make the world a better place for everyone.

     

    A female human being old enough to work or vote isn’t a girl, she’s a woman. Women of college age are women. Women of retirement age are women. It’s what we are. Let’s call ourselves what we are, instead of what we’re not. What we are is adult human beings, responsible for our own thoughts and actions. Women.

    She is right: we are women. And we are also people.  And as such we can think objectively, if we care to. This is where listening comes in. Real listening means attending to not only the words of the speaker but the other cues as well. Tone, body language, word choice and context are just a few of the cues we can use to take meaning from a speaker. Using these skills, we register the words of the speaker on a more than intellectual level. We actually feel what is behind the words, whatever that might be.  

    I come from a place where a woman calling another woman “Honey” is meant to indicate that they are open to their feelings. As in, “Oh, Honey, I’m so sorry!”  Women who bristle and complain that they are not somebody’s “Honey” are reacting to the word as if it were delivered in an entirely diffferent context.  not realizing that the word choice in this scenario is almost irrelevant.  Many words would do, because the real message is the What we hear is the sense of tenderness, intimacy and genuine empathy.  “Lady” is also used in my community to indicate that the person we are speaking to is recognized as being a mature, evolved and socially aware person of the female gender. I often use “ladies” in tandem with “gentlemen” to indicate that I respect these qualities in the people I’m addressing. Immature, self-involved or irresponsible people never earn these terms from me, although I am often willing to give them the benefit of the doubt.

     I have also been involved in organizations where “Yes, Ma’am” or “Yes Sir” indicates a respect for the instructions of whoever delivers them.  It also indicates that I will give the matter my immediate attention. Gender, in this context, is irrelevant.

     As for “girls” I don’t appreciate hearing that from men, because it’s diminutive. It sounds like I’m supposed to be small, passive and child-like. But when my women friends refer to the ‘girls’ it sounds fun to me, because in our situation we are women, but we also allow our playful sides out to get silly. Good female friendships are like that.  At the risk of sounding patronizing, I actually feel for people who can’t share that experience. 

    Anyway, my point is that we need to take it from the point of view of the speaker. Why did that person pick the particular term or phrase? Do they use the corresponding male term as well? Really, it’s the intent, what’s behind the term, that matters. And, as women, we should be strong enough to say, calmly and firmly, when we prefer people not to use certain terms. No anger, no judging, just an assertion of what is OK with us and what is not. Followed by a good natured smile that says “It isn’t personal, I just want you to respect my needs.”  No drama.  I find this approach to be more informative for the name-caller, more effective in getting them to stop, and far better for me as I don’t have to live with judgement and resentment. Win-Win-Win. Those are good words, too.

     

  • 02May
    Categories: Life Comments: 2

    Pema ChodronLast night I had the distinct pleasure of hearing Pema Chodron speak.  On the theme of wakefulness, she talked a lot about the nature and quality of monastic life.  But, as usual, she also shared a lot of other wisdom.

     

    She told a story of a tiger kept in a small cage. The tiger paced back and forth endlessly in his small space, drawing the compassion of many who watched him.  A committee of these people decided that the tiger would benefit from a large, more appropriate environment, one that was more true to his tiger nature.  They spent years working closely with the zoo and experts in this area.  They raised funds for the project and finally created a wonderful and stimulating environment . 

    3816_explorer_escape_proof_zoos-4_047003002The day came when the tiger was to be released into his wonderful new home.  The committee watched in amazement as he stepped from his cage and immediately began to pace back and forth in a small area of his new space.   Finally it dawned on them: the tiger had learned to pace back and forth in order to comfort himself. Faced with a new environment, his need for comfort was just as great as it had been in the cage.  

    Ani Pema used this story to illustrate how we revert to habitual patterns of behavior, no matter how dysfunctional, because they are familiar to us. In this familiarity there is comfort.  We respond to challenging situations  (ones that “push our buttons”) with predictable emotions. Anger, fear, depression and defensiveness are just a few manifestations.  Most often the world responds to us in equally predictable ways, reinforcing our habitual realities.   

    oryoki2Monastic life, she said, is often viewed as a sheltered environment free from these every day stresses.   But she was very clear that it is quite the opposite.  Monastic life only frees us from our means of escape (media, intoxicants, “busy-ness,” sex etc.). In this environment we have to deal directly with our own “stuff.”  We have to face up to our habitual patterns and the way they determine our reality.  In the monastery we cannot hide, as its day to day life emphasizes an active practice of being “awake.”  This wakefulness draws attention to our habits and teaches us to handle them as they arise.  It also makes us more forgiving of these habits, both in ourselves and others.

    After the talk, Ani Pema took questions from the audience. One woman asked her “If I have a few spare months, why would I want to take temporary monastic vows when I could be in Africa working in an Aids orphanage?” It was a question that resonates with many people.  Ani Pema answered her by saying that both are important, but that a strong sense of wakefulness empowers us with a profound ability to really help others in a deep way, and that the things we do after we have deepened our wakefulness will have a much more profound impact on others. If we have not developed some skill in wakefulness our ability to truly give will be very limited.  She went on to say that she had seen this first hand, especially with young people who have lived for months in the monastery.  It has made them infinitely more effective and changed the course of their lives.

    siberian_tiger-1501“OK”, you’re saying, “So what happened to the tiger?”  The tiger, apparently, did eventually venture out into its new space.  In his natural wisdom, he let go of his habits and freed himself.  People, however, are far more cerebral. We create cages in our own minds through our habitual patterns and our “busi-ness.” We often forget to give space to just being awake and aware of the precious life around us.  So here’s my question to you: What do you do to free yourself of your own caged, pacing mind?  Like the tiger, what can you do, what DO you do, to discover this amazing and beautiful world we live in?

  • 19Apr

    As a student at Uni, studying Literature, Art History, Acting and Communications, I fell into lots of discussions around how one defined “Art.”  Nowadays, I live with a photographer & web manager with an art history degree.  Suffice it to say, we have this discussion all the time.  Sadly, we are never closer to resolution.

    It seems that everyone and their dog calls what they do “art.” OK, I’ll go along with that, but I wonder if they’ve ever thought about what that means.

    Few of us would argue that paint by numbers is art.  As a knitter, I don’t believe that knitting from a pattern is, either.  But knitting further complicates this for me by introducing the idea of “craft.”  Then, of course, there is that much derided term “hobby.”  

    ac021As a fan of the official “Arts & Crafts” movement of the early 20th century, I see craft as the act of building something homemade, low-tech and functional. Crafts people, traditionally, have fit this bill: blacksmiths, cabinet makers, shoemakers, weavers etc.  Crafters possessed finely honed skills, and communities depended on them.  Extremely skilled crafts people might have been blessed with the title “artisan.” These people were seen as approaching the “artists,” who were, in turn, the people (men, I should say) who painted cathedral ceilings. The term “high art” was reserved for the purely visual arts, of course. By these definitions, tole painting and its like are totally not in the game. Enter the word “hobby.”

    protea-flower_180OK.  We have all the words on the table, so let’s go back to art. My mate argues that art must transcend a celebration of the day-to-day and tell a story. He claims that too much of what we describe as art is merely chronicalling life. He calls this archivism rather than art.  When we look at breathtakingly beautiful pictures of flowers or scenery or even design, he acknowledges its beauty, but remains unmoved. I, on the other hand, am more emotional, an experience of extreme beauty can bring me to tears. I fall into beauty and let it wrap itself around me.  It is one of the great pleasures of life.

    Here is where our definitions intersect. I  argue that art must speak to you in such a way that it transforms you.  It must alter your reality such that it lives in you forever, consciously or unconsciously changing your perspective.  Does an artistic experience make you say “that’s nice (exciting, shocking, whatever) and then move on?  Or do you hold your experience of the art in your chest and let it work it’s magic on you? Are you changed, even imperceptibly by it?

    img_5680An old friend of mine has been studying with a very famous photographer.  He’s been producing some very technically impressive photographs, definitely magazine worthy. Indeed, you just need to look at them to appreciate the skill and craft involved. He knows he has moved well beyong a mere hobby, and, believes, not surprisingly, that he is now an artist.  But here’s the problem for me: I admire his skill, but his images leave me unmoved. Like Brian, I see skilled chronicalling.  It’s like looking at yet another cookie cutter Hollywood movie star.  Yeah, yeah – they’re structurally perfect.  No argument. But they do not SPEAK to me. They tell no stories and they’re beauty doesn’t change me.  

    It all came to a head when I cancelled the cable TV. I’ve been outrageously busy at school, and found that I was reassessing not only where I spent my time, but what I wanted out of it.  The world is overflowing with stimuli: images, sounds and experiences.  They say one single copy of the New York Times contains more information that a person of the middle ages would assimilate in a lifetime.  ADD and stress disorders run rampant in our society. Watching an ADD friend of mine spend compulsive hours a day pouring over websites and twitter, I realized that we are simply overloaded. So much so that we have stopped taking the time to ponder, to wonder, and to sit with ideas.  We sit in chairs so comfortable we lose sense of our own bodies. We walk a few feet to a metal box that hands us all manner of flavours that we barely taste.  Media flows out of other boxes and drowns our minds in bites upon bites of sensory stimuli. We have lost any expectation that we might assimilate it all. TV, commercials, radio, adequate novels, textbooks, websites, email, phone calls, RSS feeds.  Everywhere you go, background music, traffic noise, and oh so many flickers of light.  The everyday churn of the information machine relentlessly drowns out the practice of reflection that truly allows an artistic experience.  Worthy though some of this information may be, the sheer volume of it defeats that opportunity to explore it.  One day I realized: Where was beauty of silence and darkness? Where was dance of a dust mote in sunlight?  When was last time sat still, pondering something truly enriching?

    018_3076dogs-playing-poker-postersSo perhaps you sense how this fits into The Brightness of Being. To live well, I determined, was to take the time to slow down and really allow time for things that would move and change me to do their work. Enter the need to determine what I wanted and what I did not. (And small, pattern oriented human animal that I am, I needed definitions.) I walked around the house and touched things.  I touched books that really weren’t worth reading, “cute” ornaments with no artistic (or even much sentimental) value, funny gifts that resources should not have been wasted on, piles and piles of mass produced “stuff” that did little but comfort my materialistic leanings.  Where was the skill, the craft, the art?  The truly artistic, truly meaningful items were overwhelmed by it all. As I held a copy of Michael Ondaatje’s Divisidero in my hands, I thought “Why do I waste my precious life attending to all this crap, when there is art like this? Should I not take the time to savour this experience?”

    Someone once said “Never have anything in your house that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful.” I would change that a little by changing “beautiful” to “artistic,” and that wherever possible we should aim for items that are both. Do the things and stimuli around you truly nourish your being or enrich your life?  That in itself is being useful. If not, why do we keep them?  

    copen9Do you believe these distinctions are something we would all do well to consider?  To coin a cliché, “Less is More.” Do you need to unclutter your life to touch this richness of experience?  How do you define what are meaningful stimuli and what merely pretty distractions?  What can we  all do to honor the artistic feast that surrounds our precious lives?

  • 03Apr

    After all the bad things have been said about Vista, it contains one redeeming feature: an excellent speech recognition program. It has been an interesting experience training this software to recognize my voice. I have a very slight but recognizable accent. Vista, naturally, has been a trained to the American voice. It has difficulty with my slightly British enunciation.

    The implications of this are rather interesting. I ask myself how often I listen to someone speaking and interpret what they say through my own training and experience. How many times when I think I have understood them, when I have been fully attending to what they have said, even when I have been using every tool in the active listening toolbox, have I misunderstood them based on my own projections?

    I am convinced that we do this all the time, even with the best of intentions. Of course, it is the nature of the human brain to work this way. This ability to learn and extrapolate from what we have learned is the nature of intelligence. Without it we would not be the species we are today.

    So what do we do with this listening challenge? What can we learn from it? I suppose the answer for me, is to remember to be humble. To not get caught in my own arrogance: to remember, always, that even when I am bringing all my skill, training, and innate abilities to bear on the situation, that nothing I think I understand from another can ever truly be exactly as I understand it.

    Not to say that I cannot learn from it, it’s just that I must be careful about making assumptions. For assumptions are only ourselves projected back onto another. So when we hear ourselves saying “That person is…” or “I know for sure that…” perhaps we should ask “Do we really?”

    We shape computers to think like us. We shape language, and even, arguably, the practice of science, to reflect and frame our understanding of the world. As humans, we love categorizing, labeling, and putting things in little boxes. The trick to really being open, the trick to genuine learning, is to know the limitations of our own efforts to put things in boxes.  In that way, we use our humanity to be more than our inventions and our systems ever can be.

  • 04Feb
    Categories: Life Comments: 4

    Once in a while, something comes along right when you need it.  Usually it’s when you have a decision to make, whether you realized it beforehand or not.   You’re just getting on with life, and along comes this person, thing, book, idea or whatever.  Suddenly your choice is clear.  Suddenly it all makes sense.  Where I come from we call it “auspicious coincidence” because we see it as an important thing.

    OK. So maybe it doesn’t always happen like that.  Maybe we see this “thing” and we ask ourselves: “Is there a message here for me?”   Maybe we feel a bit startled, a little more awake, and perhaps somewhat curious.  Then our rational, skeptical, scientific brains dismiss it and we say:  “Of course it was just a coincidence.”

    Coincidence?  Absolutely.   But who’s to say that just because two things weren’t connected by their causes that they don’t belong together?  Carl Jung talked about synchronicity.   He believed that just as two things can occur because of a causal relationship, they can also occur simply because they have a connection of meaning.  Think about it: Who decides what something means?  You do. And since meaning is made by your mind, if your mind says these two things are related, they are.  They don’t have to be related by cause and effect to be related to each other in a important way.

    The frequency and number of these events isn’t significant.  What matters is that we’re open enough to see them.  Right now.  Too often we get caught up in our “gotta do…” lives and our “me, myself and I” mentality that we don’t see the little things going on around us.   If these coincidences are based on their meaning to us, if they are projections of our own inner wisdom, then we need to give them enough “head room” to develop that wisdom.   The more aware we are of the world around us, the more of these coincidences we see.   So stop and ask yourself: “Is my mind open?  Am I listening?”

    So what do we do when we hear one of these messages?  Sometimes it’s tempting to follow the path of our super rational culture and brush them off as meaningless.  But deep down we know they’re not.  If the wisdom of the coincidence exists because of its meaning to us, then we already have our answer.  Our mind made the coincidence.  Our mind already knows what it means.  

    Listening to their wisdom is an important part of becoming a true person.  Experiences of coincidence can tell us things that we wouldn’t allow ourselves to hear otherwise.  So go on, give yourself a gift.  Ask yourself:  Have I had any auspicious coincidences lately?


    Care to tell us about a time when a coincidence changed your path?  We’d love your comments!

  • 19Jan
    Categories: Life Comments: 12

    youngmanthinking2You know, life can be pretty crappy. People cut us off in traffic, treat us like dirt, get sick and die.  We screw up, fall down, lose our tempers and find we just don’t have the money to do what we want.  We feel confused, angry, hurt, and often we just don’t understand why it all has to happen.   More to the point, why does it have to happen to us?  

    Those feelings are real.  They’re very human, and we gain nothing from telling ourselves that we shouldn’t feel them.  So, how do we feel happy in the face of this stuff going on all around us?  

    What I’ve learned is that a lot depends on my practicing “Active Gratitude.”  Active Gratitude is taking the time, every day, to list off 10 things you are really, really grateful for.  They don’t have to be big things. Some days they may be as simple as the fact that you drank a decent cup of coffee that morning, that you have a bed to sleep in, that you get to eat bananas in winter, that you get to work (and live) inside.  OK, maybe you’re laughing at me now, but there have been hard times when I’ve been grateful just for making it through the day.  The things you’re grateful for don’t have to be earth-shattering; they just have to be genuine.   

    coffeewomanI’m not saying this because I’m a naturally chipper little PollyAnna who doesn’t know the first thing about suffering.  That darkness I mentioned?  I’ve lived it.  Life has dealt me some hard blows.  Really hard.   There have been, and will continue to be, times when I want to hurt someone for the injustices they’ve inflicted on others (including  me).  That I wanted to rage at the sky or dig myself into a big hole and never come out.  But those times are very rare, and they’re getting rarer all the time.  And the little stuff? The jerk who cuts me off in traffic, the ungrateful sod who faults me for my offer of help, the flooded basement, or the broken vase that belonged to a beloved relative?  Those things have become more than manageable. 

    Yes, the bad things suck.  And yes, there are things that are serious (and I promise we’ll talk about specific issues in another post).   But Active Gratitude helps us put those things in their place and not let them consume us.  It helps us see that they are only one part of life.  We can handle them.    But for now let’s remember: When it’s all said and done, troubling issues are only part of our existence.  In the other part of our existence we are well and truly lucky to be alive, especially right here and right now.  We live in a time and place where we can choose amazing things to eat, stay warm, meet people, and find information on anything we chose to learn.  Should we fall, we have social services to assist us, police to protect us, health care to heal us and food to make us strong.  And, let’s face it, there is something to be said for not having to live in the woods and wipe our butts with leaves.  The simple fact that you are reading this right now means that you have access to power, technology, free time, the ability to read and the intelligence to understand.  All of these are very precious gifts.  Always remember that.

    pollyannaOK. Maybe you’re growling at me right now and thinking “friggin perky person!”  Maybe you think this sounds idealistic and silly. Maybe you’ve been legitimately wronged.  Maybe someone you love is ill or dying. Maybe you are.  Maybe you think that your problems are too big for such a simplistic solution.  But they’re not.  Chances are, your feelings are about something that happened in the past, something you anticipate happening in the future, or someone who you really have no control over.  What you do have control over is right now. Right this minute.  Always, you have this one precious minute, and in this minute you can allow yourself to feel grateful. 

    boyinsnowSo the next time you feel angry, the next time you feel sad, the next time you feel unsafe, take a little time to focus on the amazing things you have in your life.  Even better, do this every day, at least once, for no reason at all.  (Personally, I like to do it before I go to sleep.  Often I do it before a meal. )  Remember that accidents happen, that people get sick and die because it’s part of life, and immerse yourself in the feeling of gratitude. Right here, right now, today.  Because really, today is where we are. Today is what we’ve got. And it’s worth a hell of a lot.

  • 14Jan
    Categories: Life Comments: 6

    A Twitter friend of mine recently wrote that people had mistaken his avatar’s birthday for his. A common mistake, I’m sure. His tweet on the subject, however, prompted me to respond with “Interesting new social question: How much ARE we our avatars?” Not surprisingly, his response came back “Hmm yes intriguing! And how much are we kidding ourselves… ?? Care to write a post on it? I know I will…”Honestly, the thought had never occurred to me, but then he’s much cleverer about these things than I am. So, in honor of the ‘non-birthday’ of @timbuckteeth, Steve’s avatar, I thought I’d give it a shot.

    Before we delve too deep into this question, I should confess right up front that I’m a bit of a poser. Ever since I was a little girl I’ve enjoyed dressing up. Dolls bored me. Why dress up a bit of plastic when you have your own living, breathing mannequin as close as your own heartbeat? Remember dressing up? With a bit of fabric and a lot of imagination you could be anyone or anything. I still have a picture of a 6 year-old me, dressed only in a pair of white underwear and scarves tied around my ankles and wrists, dancing around the living room a la Isadora Duncan. (Tell anyone that and I may have to kill you.)

    My point? (Yes, please let’s get back to that.) My point is that I was experimenting, even then, with alternate versions of ’self.’ As I got older, I developed passions for acting, singing, and, ultimately, the field of communication. Needless to say, I never lost my interest in fashion, glamour and vintage clothes. I have always loved having a body. I loved using it to express thoughts, feelings and ideas. I loved using it to understand others.

    So, let’s fast forward to today and @timbuckteeth, Steve’s avatar. What is an avatar, really, but yet another way to play dress-up? And aren’t we playing dress-up all the time? Every day we make choices about how we want to be seen, both by others and by ourselves. We play with hairstyles, clothing, postures, facial expressions and any number of tools that broadcast a message about who we are. It’s a game for most of us. We can’t help it; it’s part of being human. In this light the question of avatars is not modern. Avatars are just one more manifestation of a habit as old as humankind itself.

    OK, I can hear some of you now. You’re saying “No, I’m always myself.” Rightly so. But I have to ask: If this is true, why do we change our hair, change our clothing, bother with style and moderate our voices for different contexts? Why do we dress differently for different occasions? We do it to communicate a different message about ourselves. I put on a suit to communicate that I understand the business context and can play the game. I put on a little black dress and pearls to show respect to a person, situation or institution. At a party I’m OK with sitting on the floor, legs all over the place, but I’d never do it at work. Have you ever met anyone who was exactly the same in all situations? Which begs the question: If we change ourselves regularly, who are we?

    I’ve come to believe that the problem with this question lies in expecting a single answer. We aren’t one single “us.” We are complex, multifaceted and ever changing. It is human nature to constantly absorb information, learn new things, have experiences, and age. From situation to situation we want to communicate different aspects of ever evolving selves. Buddhists say “You can’t step twice in the same river.” The same goes for who we are. We can never, ever, be the same person twice, even if we want to be. It is a distinctly human gift that we can see ourselves, and others, change - moment to moment, situation to situation. And honestly, it can be such a kick. So go ahead: Try it. If you never have, let go of the idea that you are who you are. Give yourself more freedom to play. Wear something you’ve always wanted to. Identify more closely with your inner avatar. After all, it’s all just part of beautiful, complicated you.

    Happy Birthday, @timbuckteeth. Give my love to Steve.

    Alexandra

    Update: Read Steve’s response at http://tinyurl.com/a8qmas

  • 06Jan
    Categories: Knitting, Life Comments: 3

    I’m sitting here, still and serene as a willow on a still summer night. I have nowhere to be, for the moment. Nothing to do, no-one to please. The house is quiet, and I am enchanted by the sheer simplicity of it.

    We Buddhists have a saying “Precious human birth, free and well-favoured.” This is one of those moments when I am intensely aware of the truth of this. My body is a gift. No, not in a “thank god I have a cute ass and my breasts are still where they were when I was 18” kind of way, but in a “Holy crap isn’t it wonderful to feel what I feel” kind of way.

    It’s amazing, really. As a human, I get to sit here and feel how wonderfully soft and supportive the bed is under my butt. My healthy, long legs get to stretch out and feel the caress of my oh-so soft socks around my feet. I feel the weight of my cat, still, soft, yet infused with the gravitas which is her unique personality. Yes, I can feel that in the way she sits on me. She and I share the gentle fluffiness of the down duvet that surrounds us.

    The air in here smells slightly of wool. The same wool my delightfully dexterous fingers are making into a scarf for my love. I breathe it in and hold it in my belly, where it resides comfortably, with the satisfied feeling of a belly full of toast, peanut butter and wild cherry jam. Bliss.

    There is a light above me. A soft, glowy light that playfully mimics real source of illumination in the room – the forcefully enthusiastic light of the sun bouncing off the windowledge. I have not dressed yet, so the curtains are shut, but the sun will not be denied. It backlights the curtains, throwing joyfully illuminated patterns into the room. It thrusts itself around the edges of the fabric, calling me.

    I think about the sun. The sun is the source of all this. Were it not for the sun there would be no warmth, no light, no life. And it pushes on. It lives valiantly, unashamed and strong, moment by moment ,it just IS. I am grateful to the sun for making my small life possible. For making all our lives possible. Too soon I will be caught up in deadlines, in other people’s demands, in running around like a monkey on crack, but for now I just want to sit and revel in this. I want to honour the sun by just BEING. That is it’s lesson. Just to get on and BE.

    My dear Mother used to quote Shakespeare. She particularly liked this line from Hamlet: “This above all: to thine own self be true. Then must follow, like the night the day, though canst be false to no man.” The sun knows this, and we do well to remember it, too. As I go through my day, I will hold this in my heart. I will be like the sun: unashamedly true to my own pure nature, living moment to moment in my physical being, getting on with whatever the day brings. I will SHINE.

    Hope you shine, too. I’d love to hear about it.

  • 01Jan
    Categories: Life Comments: 1

    It would be cliché to talk about new beginnings here, this being New Year’s Day and my first post and all. So we won’t. Instead, sitting wrapped in a quilt on this blizzardy day, I’m caught by the idea of brightness and life.

    Life is full of bright, shiny moments that take your breath away.  And luminous ones that shine gently, inviting further enquiry. When we talk of anger, we talk of blazing heat. When inspired, we have a bright idea. Depth of understanding gets labelled brilliance. Even sadness evokes a dull, soft glow.

    It is these moments of light that define the experience of being human. They take us beyond being mere biological machines and make us the complex creatures we are. This blog is about looking at these moments. It is about the wild, brilliant ride of simple human life - my life, and the lives of those who touch me. Welcome to the Brightness of Being.