Wild abundance

Scarcity of creation and scarcity of distribution have been replaced by a surplus of both.*
Seth Godin

Capitalism is a poor employer
of imagination and creativity,
Producing stockpiles
of talent and stockrooms
of redundancy and landfills of waste.

Yet it is hard to imagine a world where
an overflow of love,
a mountain of unused mercy,
an unused warehouse of care
will ever exist.

Beyond our sophistication,
We rediscover the wildness
of our nature that will not
waste anything
of human creativity and giving.

*Seth Godin’s blog: Small changes to big systems.

SOME RANDOM THIN|SILENCE
THIN|SILENCE FROM A YEAR AGO

Slow forward

Researchers distinguish between active acceptance and resigning acceptance.*

Experimenting with your emotions helps you move from self-judgement to self-curiosity**
Anne-Laure Le Cunff

A bad night–
Major past mistakes
crowding in on me.

I rushed toward feeling
bad about them, feeling
bad about me.

I thought that I’d learnt
from my errors,
But still they haunted me.

This morning after, I read
how emotions unfold
through four stages:^

Encounter, attention, appraisal, feeling and behaviour–
How, at any stage,
I can bring my curiosity and inquiry.

I cannot go back
but I can go forward
with the time I have left.

An agent of curiosity
continuing to learn,
Living knowledge into wisdom.

*Anne-Laure Le Cunff’s Tiny Experiments;
**Anne-Laure Le Cunff’s Ness Labs newsletter: Experimenting With Emotions;
^The research of psychologist James Gross.

SOME RANDOM THIN|SILENCE
THIN|SILENCE FROM A YEAR AGO

The wild(ish) self

The Self is not a punitive force that rushes about punishing women, men, and children. The Self is a wildish God who understands the nature of creatures.*
Clarissa Pinkola Estés

Flight from the self allows for avoiding a confrontation with the void of self … We need new types of leisure that allow for contemplation and meditation. To this end, man needs the courage to be lonely.**
Viktor Frankl

May we not run away from ourselves,
There is nothing to fear,
Only a wonderfully plastic being
capable of great compassion,
Who can learn from failure,
Begin again countless times,
Keep dreaming, and, finally,
Bring something wonderful and
beautiful into the world,
Someone’s world.

*Clarissa Pinkola Estés’ Women Who Run With the Wolves;
**Viktor Frankl’s The Will to Meaning.

SOME RANDOM THIN|SILENCE
THIN|SILENCE FROM A YEAR AGO

Can I let the wonder in?

The more we unself by widening the aperture to let the world in, the less we suffer.*
Maria Popova

Are you breathing?
Are you here?
Did you just take a breath?
Are you about to take another?
Do you have a habit of regularly doing this?
Gift.
Gift.
Gift.**

Rob Bell

I do not judge,
I seek no opinion,
I will remain open.

I am learning to be open
to the wonder of sunshine
and growing things.

I am realising
wonder does not ask me
to cover great distances.

It is
here and now,
And … oh my!

*Maria Popova’s The Marginalian blog: How to Feel Whole in a Broken World: An Astronaut’s Antidote to Despair;
**Rob Bell’s How To Be Here.

SOME RANDOM THIN|SILENCE
THIN|SILENCE FROM A YEAR AGO

Your story (part two)

Unfortunately, those who refuse the call don’t have a life. Either they die, or in trying to lead more mundane lives, they exist as nonentities, what T. S. Eliot called “hollow men.”**
Joseph Campbell

Our human restlessness – our search for meaning, our drive toward extreme adventures, our compulsion to create something of lasting value – these are not separate from longing for genuine connection. Blue moments reveal that our existential quests and our relational hungers spring from the same source.*
AleXander McManus

There are more people
waiting to meet you–
Your adventures
will lead you to them.

Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi wrote^
about how we are born
with contradictory sets
of instructions:

One is a conservative instinct
for preservation and energy-saving,
The other is expansive,
Embracing risk and exploration.^^

Whilst the former comes easily to us,
The latter demands energy
and may be resisted,
After which it withers, hiding in shadows.

Yet when we respond
to this call, this need, this itch or urge,
There awaits an esprit de corps
With those we meet along the way.

Differing from the communities
we set out from,
Victor Turner preferred to name
these fellow travellers communitas.*^

Just as our hunger to feed our conservative instinct
will include others, so our desire
to feed the expansive will bring us
into deep connection around a common purpose.

Whether at home or abroad,
There is no making of us
without others, our stories being replete
with those who share our days.

*Joseph Campbell’s Pathways to Bliss;
**AleXander McManus’ Blue Moments;
^Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi’s Creativity;
^^This is a very simplified version of what Csikszentmihalyi writes;
*^Victor Turner’s The Ritual Process.

SOME RANDOM THIN|SILENCE
THIN|SILENCE FROM A YEAR AGO

Your story (part one)

And if I want to know myself, to gain insight into the meaning of my own life, then I, too, must come to know my own story … through our personal myths, each of us discovers what is true and what is meaningful in life.*
Dan McAdams

Culture defeats tactics, every time, and culture is the most resilient component of a system.**
Seth Godin

It’s not that we decide one day
To write a story about ourselves
or not–
We toddled into stories,
Exploring worlds
of “me and everything else.”

We come to find ourselves in
familial
educational
institutional
societal, and
national narratives.

There are more than enough
ideas coming at us to last a lifetime,
To live inside someone else’s life:
We must decide
how to write our own life-myths–
Any other tactic will not work.

You need your story,
I need my story.

*Dan McAdams’ The Stories We Live By;
**Seth Godin’s This Is Strategy.

SOME RANDOM THIN|SILENCE
THIN|SILENCE FROM A YEAR AGO

You’ve got the power

To understand the narrative character of one’s own life is therefore to understand its inherent mysticism.*
James Carse

Sometimes a prayerful, painful approach to a difficult day may mean stopping and starting a hundred times until we learn, like a virtuoso, the thorough, attentive, rhythmic presence of the true musician.
David Whyte

The most powerful of stories–
Those with the complexity
and tenacity of a myth,
Form around an experience
of awe and wonder,
Whether awesome or awful.

The story’s power is forged
in talent and grit,
In the struggle
and discomfort
of living our tale into the everyday,
Proffering into someone’s world.

I saw that those who are supposed to be powerless – writers and scholars, grass-roots organisers and movements, visionaries, the disparaged and overlooked – have changed the world again and again.^

*James Carse’s Breakfast At the Victory;
**David Whyte’s Crossing the Unknown Sea;
^Rebecca Solnit’s No Straight Road Takes You There.

SOME RANDOM THIN|SILENCE
THIN|SILENCE FROM A YEAR AGO

Let the game begin

I learned this, at least, by my experiment: if you advance confidently in the direction or your dreams and endeavour to live the life you have imagined, you will meet with success unexpected in common hours. You will put things behind you and pass an invisible boundary.*
Henry David Thoreau

None of them has outrun uncertainty. They’ve simply found a way to stop treating it as the enemy. It turns out that not knowing is a necessary part of being alive in the world … Not knowing is part of the adventure.**
Bernadette Jiwa

Your imagination promises some escapade,
But you’ll need to experiment^
to avoid falling into a daydream.

You don’t know where this will end
or even if it will work,
But it’s as though you’ve awakened.

*Henry David Thoreau’s Walden (adapted by Nicholas Bone);
**Bernadette Jiwa’s Briefly blog: On Certainty;
^What would be the smallest iteration of what you’re imagining?

SOME RANDOM THIN|SILENCE
THIN|SILENCE FROM A YEAR AGO

Your must

Don’t set your mind on things you don’t possess as if they were yours, but count the blessings you actually possess and think how much you would desire them if they weren’t already yours. But watch yourself, that you don’t value these things to the point of being troubled if you should lose them.*
Marcus Aurelius

Our keys (skills, talents, traits, interests) are best utilised when we try enough things to figure out some doors that they’ll open.**
Gabe Anderson

Have you ever wanted
someone else’s talents, role, status, reward?

Have you ever wondered
if someone else is looking at you in the same way?

Downplaying and undervaluing what we have and do
is a damaging, even dangerous, game to play.

Better to notice and develop what we have
so that adventures may open through our deepest joy.^

(Deepest joy being a way
of describing where our talents, energies, and values meet.)

This is our power and love
for bringing change to someone’s world.

Radical engagement works with power and love to collaborate to bring about fundamental change.^^

*Ryan Holiday’s The Daily Stoic;
**Gabe Anderson’s blog: What Good Is A Key …;
^Frederick Buechner suggests that we find our purpose where our deepest joy meets the world’s greatest need,
^^Adam Kahane’s Everyday Habit For Transforming Systems.

SOME RANDOM THIN|SILENCE
THIN|SILENCE FROM A YEAR AGO

Naturally

Nature runs on sunlight. Nature uses only the energy it needs. Nature fits form to function. Nature recycles everything. Nature rewards cooperation. Nature banks on diversity. Nature demands local expertise. Nature curbs excesses from within. Nature taps the power of limits.*
Jean Houston

We’re surrounded by problems. Problems create the arc of our days, and so solving them creates value for ourselves and for others.**
Seth Godin

Earth is smarter than us–
When we think of ourselves as
some super-species apart.

Though when we understand ourselves
to be Earth, we get to
be smart, too.

The journey into the heart of the natural world is a journey into reverence. It is a journey into seeing the I-am-ness of every life-form and every human being, and never reducing the other to a category of being, whether that be of gender or religion, of race or nationality. I am who I am. And I will be who be who I will be.^

*Jean Houston’s The Wizard of Us;
**Seth Godin’s blog: The Knot;
^Philip Newell’s Sacred Earth, Sacred Soul.

SOME RANDOM THIN|SILENCE
THIN|SILENCE FROM A YEAR AGO