There is Always Hope.
Love this on several levels. Jane, you always know how to make my day.
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by Patrick Rhone, Master Generalist
There is Always Hope.
Love this on several levels. Jane, you always know how to make my day.
I want you to consider performing the occasional act of kindness on an regular and ongoing basis. Start today. Here are some ideas:
* The next time you see a car parked at an expired meter, if you have a quarter, stick it in.
* Have a full “buy some/get one free” punch card for your local coffee establishment? Give it to a random person in line.
* Hold the door or elevator for someone coming.
* On a toll road, pay for the car behind you.
* Buy flowers and give them to someone. Perhaps even someone random.
* Simply tell someone that they look good that day, or their dog is really cute, or their kid has good manners.
* Leave the book you just finished reading in a public place with a note to say it’s free for the taking.
* Write a thank you card or letter to someone “just because”.
What I aim to suggest you put in motion here is karma. Karma is the based on the idea of cause and effect and that ones actions have an effect on the past, present, and future. The positive and good actions you put out into the world will, in turn, make the world as a whole a better place, thus benefiting you. Karma is often thought of as good deeds one does for the benefit of others. But that is only half the story.
If you have any level of basic compassion, and a bit of natural human selfishness, you will do such things because they have the immediate effect of making you feel good as well. Do not be ashamed of this being part of the motivation. It’s OK. Really. It’s alright to do something for someone else because it makes you feel better. Because, in turn, your good feelings will reflect and spread to others who care about and encounter you as well. The karma is instant and is supposed to travel in both directions. That’s the whole point.
We would like to think that we get to choose times of action and times of rest. The truth is, most of us don’t.
When things are busy, it is usually due to external forces and commitments. That report we promised our boss. The deadline for the project. The kids needing a bath. During these times, we often long for quiet and rest.
When things are slow and quiet, once again usually due to no choice of our own, we often find ourselves searching for things to fill the time. A book to read. A place to go. Someone to talk to. Something, anything, to do. Anything to keep ourselves busy.
Lately, I have been trying to be more mindful of this natural ebb and flow of life over which I have little control. I have been trying to focus on enjoying both modes for what they are as opposed to longing for the other. Letting my rest prepare me for action and my action contain the promise of rest.

I have to wear a watch. I’m very old school this way. I feel naked without one. Time itself is so precious and fleeting, I need to feel aware of my place and connection to it at all times.
Perhaps it’s a mark of my age, but I don’t understand how one can get used to checking the time on their phone. Even if it’s right there when it’s turned on.
I also have rigid and specific preferences surrounding the type of watch I will wear. It must be analog. It must have real numbers. Not markers, not roman numerals. Numbers. It also must have a day and date. I can’t remember what happened five minutes ago, do you honestly expect me to remember the date?
My current watch is a Timex Perpetual Calendar. Great watch, simple, durable, fits my requirements, and I don’t have to remember which months have 30 days.
I have two favorite drummers of all time. They are radically different from each other. But what I love about them is the same.
Stewart Copeland is best known as drummer for The Police. As a drummer, he is best known for his precision and his ability to get a myriad of versatility using a relatively small drum kit.
Alex Van Halen is the drummer for Van Halen. As a drummer, he is best known for his big sound and for is ability to, in the space of a four minute song, make use of every piece of his very large drum kit.
You may look at these two and wonder how they could possibly have anything, outside of being drummers, in common. Here’s how: They both take the tools at hand and use them to their fullest extent. Big or small, they each squeeze every drop from their sets. In doing so, they each have carved out a place of their own in the history of modern rock music.
It is a reminder for me to try to do the same. No matter if I am using pen and paper, a smartphone, or a desktop computer. Command the tool at hand, squeeze every drop, carve out a place.
Stephen Fry Kinetic Typography – Language (via 52 Tiger)
Well sod them to Hades. They think they’re guardians of language. They’re no more guardians of language then the Kennel Club is the guardian of dogkind.
Writers have always been at war with Editorial.
Land Speed Record (album) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The title has a double meaning, referring to both the band’s ability to play as fast as they could (there are 17 songs crammed into 26½ minutes) and their penchant for amphetamine pills, which they took mostly as appetite suppressants due to lack of money to buy food.[citation needed]
I say, listening to this album on repeat is the only citation you will ever need… For anything, really.
Letters of Note: Mark Twain on proofreaders
Conceive of this tumble-bug interesting himself in my punctuation — which is none of business & with which he has nothing to do — & then instead of correcting mis-spelling, which is in his degraded line, striking a mark under the word & silently confessing that he doesn’t know what the hell to do with it! The damned half-developed foetus!
Writers have always been at war with Editorial.
A glass half-full of pessimism. – On punctuation.
I’m not moving my periods and commas for America; I’m leaving them where they are for America.
Writers have always been at war with Editorial.
Mule Design Studio’s Blog: The Chokehold of Calendars
The problem with calendars is that they are additive rather than subtractive. They approach your time as something to add to rather than subtract from. Adding a meeting is innocuous. You’re acting on a calendar. A calendar isn’t a person. It isn’t even a thing. It’s an abstraction. But subtracting an hour from the life of another human being isn’t to be taken lightly. It’s almost violent. It’s certainly invasive. Shared calendars are vessels you fill by taking things away from other people.
So. Very. True. This is a great examination of why traditional calendars don’t work and what can be done to fix them.