Showing posts with label Michael Lang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Lang. Show all posts

Friday, May 24, 2024

Senses working overtime #472

1 Autumn at Maple Grove




The camelia by Jacky's tack shed has had a blooming great autumn and now is shedding a blizzard of pink flowers.


2 Reading: The Road To WoodstockMichael Lang




Still reading this when I can (another super frenetic work week). 

The book concentrates on the preparations and three days of the original Woodstock Music and Art Festival of 1969 and it is fascinating! So many great details; Michael shares the stage with quotes from many of the performers and his fellow organisers. 


3 Listening: Joan Baez - Live at Woodstock 




Joan is an amazing person and singer. I was drawn back to this incandescent moment in time thanks to reading Michael Lang's book. 

No single highlight - you need to experience this performance from start to finish.


4 Watching: Page 8 




Bill Nighy is awesome in this. A spellbinding performance. See it on Netflix.


5 Watching: Break Point




Generally, I enjoy these sports series on Netflix. This one focusing on the tennis tour is not as frenetic as others which suits the sport. Worth dipping into from time to time.


Overtime: 


Sociology professor Daniel Chambliss, who spent years researching the qualities of elite swimmers, on what creates excellence:
"Excellence is mundane. Superlative performance is really a confluence of dozens of small skills or activities, each one learned or stumbled upon, which have been carefully drilled into habit and then are fitted together in a synthesized whole. There is nothing extraordinary or superhuman in any one of those actions; only the fact that they are done consistently and correctly, and all together, produce excellence.

When a swimmer learns a proper flip turn in the freestyle races, she will swim the race a bit faster; then a streamlined push off from the wall, with the arms squeezed together over the head, and a little faster; then how to place the hands in the water so no air is cupped in them; then how to lift them over the water; then how to lift weights to properly build strength, and how to eat the right foods, and to wear the best suits for racing, and on and on.

Each of those tasks seems small in itself, but each allows the athlete to swim a bit faster. And having learned and consistently practiced all of them together, and many more besides, the swimmer may compete in the Olympic Games... the little things really do count."
(Courtesy James Clear)

Friday, May 17, 2024

Senses working overtime #471

1 Smelling: The great outdoors at Maple Grove...




...as I harrowed the paddocks and collected firewood from the woodshed.


2 Reading: The Road To Woodstock - Michael Lang




3 Listening: Captured Angel - Dan Fogelberg




If you want just one song try Aspen/ These Days.


4 Watching: Monk 




We're still enjoying this series - up to the end of Season 2 now.


5 Tasting: Ross' cheesecake explosion




My brother and his family are on an American adventure, including a visit to The Cheesecake Factory in Atlanta.


Overtime: 

The more a man finds his sources of pleasure in himself — the happier he will be. Therefore, it is with great truth that Aristotle says, 'To be happy means to be self-sufficient'.

Schopenhauer in his essay, The Wisdom of Life.

Friday, January 14, 2022

Senses working overtime #349

1 Macca and Joko




2 WTWMC Body Parts!




The Three Amigos (Kev, Greg and me) have finished our latest Spotify playlist - 45 songs with a body part in the title from 1951 to 2021, which you can enjoy (and even like) here.


3 Janet Jackson (remember her?)




4 Songs as shelters in time - Austin Kleon




 In praise of Ginger Baker




Enjoying playing this double LP compilation LOUDLY today!


Overtime: RIP Ronnie Spector - a unique voice; RIP Michael Lang