(via PhotoBlog – Two women share first kiss at US Navy ship’s return)
This is what Democracy looks like.
...
by Patrick Rhone
(via PhotoBlog – Two women share first kiss at US Navy ship’s return)
This is what Democracy looks like.
12 Things You Should Stop Doing in 2012 | SQLRockstar | Thomas LaRock
Pretty great list here. I especially like #12.
David Allen’s advice on making GTD simpler to adopt | GTD Times
I agree with the post, it is hard to get any simpler than this. Also, this is a great basis on which to build any productivity system, further proof that one does not have to be canonically GTD in order to GTD.
It’s easy to forget that, as a writer, you don’t have to have your fingers on the keyboard to be doing your job. Sometimes your best work is only realized when you are away from the very place where that work will later be put onto the page.
So, so, true. My best ideas, and my best writing, never come when I’m actually writing. The come when I’m not writing.
If you want to reach peak performance, you have to find the limit. Finding the limit means stepping over the limit. Going too far, going too fast. It means taking a good idea to the extreme to learn just how far it’ll bend before it snaps.
each morning
I awake
to the sound
of the girl
at the end
of the hall
the sun is on
she tells me
though it’s not
not this early
or this late
in the fall
she believes
she sees light
which is enough
for me to rise
and respond
to her call
what matters
more than sleep
is these mornings
while she
is still
so very small
in life
with a child
you have a handful
of suns
either real or imagined
that is all
Scripting News: Our short attention span
I wonder if a walk across the country in summer wouldn’t be something to do. And not directed anywhere. Not a march on Washington. We’re not taking back the country, or occupying anything. Maybe lots of people walking to completely random places. From New York to Spokane. San Diego to Bangor. Burlington to Austin. Everywhere you go, people walking. Visiting strange parts. Having a cold lemonade on a front porch in Podunk. Drinking beer from a paper bag on a front stoop in Baltimore. Talking baseball and politics. Discovering what it means to be American.
Such a lovely idea.
Path: Introducing Path 2, the Smart Journal
We’ve built a host of new features that make it easier to share even more on Path — your thoughts, the music you’re listening to, where you are, who you’re with, when you wake and when you sleep, and as always, your photos and videos.
I’ve used Path for a while and it has stood the test of time on my home screen. I liked its approach from the beginning. That was, a way of sharing moments from your life with up to 50 of your closest friends. What I love more is that hat number was not arbitrary, it was based on Dunbar’s number. Actual, research-based science on the number of close friends you can have.
With this latest version, they have taken that idea and knocked it out of the park. This is, hands down, the most beautiful app I have seen on the iPhone. And, what is more, the app has now evolved into a personal journal for the digital age. A low friction and fun way to catalog the moments in your day that hold meaning to you and share them with those closest to you or, thanks to Twitter, Facebook, and Foursquare integration, the whole world if you so choose.
As for me, I likely will stick to the science and use the heck out of this daily.
I’m an extravert, married to the Queen of introverts, and I too approve this message!
As a former(-ish) introvert, I think most of this is pretty spot-on. [via @sheatsb]
UPDATE: this is a list by Linda Kreger Silverman, most probably from the chapter “How To Care For An Introvert,” in her book, Upside-Down Brilliance: The Visual Spatial Learner.
Buying the book just so I can cut this part out for my fridge.