Friday, April 24, 2020

Senses working overtime #259

A Tale Of Two Cities


Like a lot of us I've been working from home (full tilt too as it happens) and I mistakenly thought that would give me an opportunity to read more of A Tale Of Two Cities but that time was swallowed up by urgent and important school stuff. So I'm slowly edging forward - right now on page 241 (of 307 in this edition).

It's grim - Paris in the revolution was no picnic! But I am loving the language and the removal to a traumatic time in the past as an antidote to the traumatic times of the present.

Although, it's ANZAC day in NZ and Australia today - a day to remember another traumatic time in our past. 

Interesting species aren't we?

Poetry corner (returns)



Poetry




Austin's zines


I love Austin Kleon's newsletters - always filled with great creativity. I urge you to check out his zines.

Sweet Baby James



The music of James Taylor is a great salve for these times. 

Overtime: 


Friday, April 17, 2020

Senses working overtime #258

The search for the grail
(or why finding the original 1977 version verges on the impossible)


A lot of the family are binge watching franchise movies (we've just finished the five Bourne movies frinstance). Might be a good opportunity to go back to 1977! I might have a copy of the original on VHS.

Being Bill



Love Bill Murray? Everybody does!

3 Famous art museums you can visit...



...from your workspace! Seventeen of them!

Brothers



Great piece, pithy and well written, by a younger brother (age 62) about his attempt to reconnect his brotherly bond with his grumpy older brother (64) on a tramping adventure!

Excerpt:

I told Don on the phone that the hike would cement our brotherly bonds and reconnect us to the wilderness where we had spent significant chunks of our young adulthoods. I told him we might find something like peace in alpine meadows and under starry skies. I told him the trip could be life changing, that it would provide us both a much needed reset.

“No thanks,” he said. Don had never been one for big speeches.

“Why not?”

“What’s the point?”

“Fun? Exercise? Living in the moment? Leaving our comfort zones? Getting some clarity and perspective? Rediscovering purpose and connection?” I’m a talker.

“Spare me the inner-life mumbo jumbo,” he said. “You have the luxury of dabbling in that stuff, since you haven’t had a real job in decades.”


Seth Godin's message
The boat is really, really big and we’re all in it.

This is a slog, and there will be another side. It is unevenly distributed, it’s a tragedy and it’s a challenge. But we’re in it together and with care and generosity, we can find perspective, possibility and hope.

Overtime: Warren Ellis' sign-off
Don't be like me.  Get some rest, eat properly, sleep when you can, and turn your phone off once in a while. Nothing wrong with shutting the rest of the world off when you need to. I'll keep an eye on it for you while you're gone. Take a breath, go and look at the sky, hold on tight.  You're doing fine.

Friday, April 10, 2020

Senses working overtime #257

Larry on lock-downs



All you need to know from Larry David!

Cal Newport on Surviving Screens and Social Media in Isolation

I know - there are a million articles about self-isolation out there but this one from GQ is a look at the effect of wall to wall digital use on our daily lives. It is well worth a look.

Why You're Suddenly Remembering Your Dreams in the Morning

This was spooky - I'm dreaming a lot these days and yes, remembering them when I wake up. Why?

Ten surprising facts about everyday household objects


Isaac Newton, the plague of Britain in the 17th century and the results of his enforced self-isolation.



Isaac Newton by William Blake

Overtime: Austin on lock-downs



Great perspective from Austin on how social distancing actually brings us together more.

Friday, April 3, 2020

Senses working overtime #256

Coming to you from Sunday!


Photo by Nathan Dumlao on Unsplash
The lock-down has meant that every day feels like the Sundays I experienced growing up in the sixties and seventies in Nu Zild: no shops open, no mobility outside of the local area I lived in (only so far I could go on my Raleigh bike), no mail, no sport. 

All I had was: local exploration, reading, and listening to music!! 

Hey - exactly what I am doing now in lock-down!

1 Groundhog Day



This great movie is relevant, again, and again.

Kenny Rogers




One of my first albums back in the early seventies was Kenny Rogers and The First Edition's Greatest Hits. I remember looking at it for a while in the shop and saving up for it, slowly. When I finally bought it, costing me $5.75 of hard earned pocket money, I played it a lot. 

This interview was suggested by Austin Kleon and it's a great view of KR.

Rest in Peace Kenny. 

The semiotics of face-masks


Seth Godin sums it up for us!

Stages of grief and the world as it is - Austin Kleon


“We’re feeling a number of different griefs. We feel the world has changed, and it has. We know this is temporary, but it doesn’t feel that way, and we realize things will be different…. Understanding the stages of grief is a start. But whenever I talk about the stages of grief, I have to remind people that the stages aren’t linear and may not happen in this order. It’s not a map but it provides some scaffolding for this unknown world. There’s denial, which we say a lot of early on: This virus won’t affect us. There’s anger: You’re making me stay home and taking away my activities. There’s bargaining: Okay, if I social distance for two weeks everything will be better, right? There’s sadness: I don’t know when this will end. And finally there’s acceptance. This is happening; I have to figure out how to proceed. Acceptance, as you might imagine, is where the power lies.”

Tips on living with yourself from an expert with 50 years experience  



Billy Barr lives in Gothic, Colo., a silver mining town
 that was abandoned more than 100 years ago.
This is a good list of 5 tips from Billy Barr, a guy who knows what he's talking about!

Overtime: This week's sign off from Warren Ellis:


Go sit by a window, or stand by your front door, for five minutes.  Take in some light and some air and just be there for five minutes.  Be at peace, take some slow breaths, and relax, just for five minutes. Little steps.  Day by day. You know how to do this. Look after yourself first. Hold on tight.  See you next week.