It is quite possible to leave your home for a walk in the early morning air and return a different person – beguiled, enchanted.
— Mary Ellen Chase
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by Patrick Rhone, Master Generalist
It is quite possible to leave your home for a walk in the early morning air and return a different person – beguiled, enchanted.
— Mary Ellen Chase
Democracy.

The girls are away for the weekend and I’m over capacity in the cellar so, why not?

Experiments into other ways: The great wall of money
Take what you need, leave what you don’t…
A fascinating experiment in community and kindness. (via Boing Boing)
The heart makes dreams seem like ideas.
— Daniel Woodrell – Winter’s Bone
Now that you’ve deleted Facebook, Nicholas Bate suggests some other things to consider deleting while your at it. Why not? You’re on a roll.
This post will likely cause some consternation in my household (and I swear this is not specifically directed towards my very much overworked and time-constrained wife), but there is a phrase that increasingly rankles my brain; “I don’t have the time”. If there’s one phrase I would like to eradicate from our language it is this.
Why?
We’re all working with the exact same 24 hours in our day. We all have the same time. We all have the time we have. I have the same amount you have. The same amount in a day that everyone and everything else has.
The difference is how we choose to spend that time. There may be some very valid reasons why you choose to spend your 24 hours differently than how I choose mine. And, there are some things we all have to choose in order to simply stay alive. We all need to sleep, at some point, for instance. But, trust me, even those are choices.
You have the time. I have the time. What you may not be doing is making the time. We make the time for the things that are, or at least seem, important. We may choose to spend an hour working instead of that same hour playing because making money at that time seems more important than having fun. But, don’t say you don’t have time to play. You are choosing, perhaps for very good reasons, to work instead.
So, the next time you find yourself complaining about the things you wish you were doing instead of the things you are doing, perhaps consider saying “I’m not making the time” instead. It’s not only closer to the truth but just may change your perspective on your priorities as well.
Michael Wade with a timely reminder, “The evening is the best time to plan the next day. Mornings can be hectic. Surprises may arrive with the newspapers.”
“I’m perfectly imperfect. Because, if you’re perfectly imperfect it means you always have to work on yourself.” — Dag Aabye, The ‘Most Elusive’ Man in North America – YouTube
On Kottke, a selfish argument for making the world a better place. Some food for thought. That said, heavy on the argument but not on solutions (which are far, far, more difficult for many complex reasons).