Stones hold us back,
take us forward,
keep us warm, leave us cold,
open our eyes, close them,
stand with us at the beginning of love
and at the end of it - all things that people do.
Source: Stepping stones to life’s mysteries, Janice Tay, The Straits Times, 21 Feb 09, p. A22
February 28, 2009
February 22, 2009
Image credit: TomNatt
Recently, I tasted information anxiety (hence no post for the past 3 months), caused by the continuous onslaught of articles, links, and updates from all over internet. This river of news can be personalised by using a RSS reader to harvest gems from blogs, social bookmarking sites, news portals, and other websites (I use Google Reader).
The upside is time saved, as you just need to visit one place for all the latest information from as many sites as you want. The downside is attention crash.
I shared Post-Punk Nerd’s lament at how his online habits caused him to read and reflect less often:
February 15, 2009
Image credit: Sam and boyfriend Bob gallery, Herald Sun
Sam, the koala bear in the photo above, drinking water with the aid of volunteer firefighter, Dave Tree. Sam’s story (esp. this YouTube video) captured worldwide attention, as Australia fought to overcome its deadly bushfires.
Hope grows stronger with love. Sam turns out to be a female koala and has bonded with Bob, another koala victim of the bushfires.
Reuters: Bob puts his paw around new friend and fellow fire survivor Sam as she recovers from her burns.
February 12, 2009
February 9, 2009
Image credit: ohdearbarb
I should have written this last month. Anyway, I’m dusting away the cobwebs on this blog to usher in some good cheer, despite the economic gloom.
And is it too late for making new year resolutions (NYRs)? Well, I’m no fan of NYRs. But after reading these bold, flossy, funny resolutions (in comments section, all because of a free book), I was inspired to write my own:
1. Join the slow blogging movement, as blogging is like exercise for the brain.
2. Catch up on 17 (to-date) unread books, before buying or borrowing more.
3. Revisit these beautiful places in Europe: Chamonix, Interlaken, Lake District (links to Flickr Search results).
4. Learn falconry at Ireland’s School of Falconry on the grounds of Ashford Castle, or in the Scottish Highlands.
Admittedly, the last two are on my someday/maybe list.
Sidenote: A someday/maybe list is to track things that you want to do, but do not have the resources or bandwidth to work on them in the short term. The idea came from the bestselling Getting Things Done (GTD) book by David Allen. However, this sort of list can morph into a procrastination or fantasy zone. To keep mine in lean shape, I turn to these useful ideas for pruning someday/maybe lists.
February 1, 2009
Information Anxiety
Image credit: TomNatt
Recently, I tasted information anxiety (hence no post for the past 3 months), caused by the continuous onslaught of articles, links, and updates from all over internet. This river of news can be personalised by using a RSS reader to harvest gems from blogs, social bookmarking sites, news portals, and other websites (I use Google Reader).
The upside is time saved, as you just need to visit one place for all the latest information from as many sites as you want. The downside is attention crash.
I shared Post-Punk Nerd’s lament at how his online habits caused him to read and reflect less often:
My use of the internet is, it turns out, abuse. I have traded away my brooding study in exchange for an all encompassing buckshot of skim reading, estimation, and chiding. I have not got very much to say anymore, but very many topics on which I feel required to speak. In high school I would spend whatever money I had ordering books, and I would wile away an entire weekend dissecting Kropotkin’s The Conquest of Bread. Now I struggle to get through an abridged edition of Marx’s Capital, and I spend no more than fifteen minutes on it at a time before I go running for my RSS Reader to see if XKCD updated. In my youth I spent time writing epic (and awful, as most youthful writing is) novels on reams of loose leaf paper. These days I have to force myself to sit down and drag a short story to a conclusion, if I get that far.Clay Burell, at his Beyond School’s post, offered some insights into the nature of online reading:
Maybe it’s the daily “fast reading”: the Google Reader, the Stumbling Upon, the one-inch “Digging” and consumption of the latest hi-calorie Delicious thing.Elsewhere, online literacy has been criticised to be a lesser form of reading. Anyway, there is only so much my attention can take. The solution is straightforward, but not easy. That is, to get out of the river. After all, the river of news coming at me is self-created.
But let’s be fair. These “filtered” publishings we daily (hourly, secondly) consume are often of high quality and high value. The problem comes in the fact that, taken together, they are disjointed, fragmentary, somewhat random, and almost always “contemporaneous” and “immediate” - connected to the day or the year, but by no means the longer river of time. And that makes our thoughts more like mayflies flitting on that river than old growths towering beside it.
Beacon of Hope
Image credit: Sam and boyfriend Bob gallery, Herald Sun
Sam, the koala bear in the photo above, drinking water with the aid of volunteer firefighter, Dave Tree. Sam’s story (esp. this YouTube video) captured worldwide attention, as Australia fought to overcome its deadly bushfires.
Hope grows stronger with love. Sam turns out to be a female koala and has bonded with Bob, another koala victim of the bushfires.
Reuters: Bob puts his paw around new friend and fellow fire survivor Sam as she recovers from her burns.
How Lincoln and Darwin Shaped the Modern World
Today is the 200th birthday of Charles Darwin (1809-1882) and Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865). Adam Gopnik, author of Angels and Ages: A Short Book About Darwin, Lincoln, and Modern Life (2009), had this to say about both men, and why their ideas matter:
For links to Lincoln-related information, see HyperLincs: Celebrating Abraham Lincoln’s 200th birthday online (great tip to check out iTunes U for its access to free lectures from universities).
With the usual compression of popular history, their reputations have been reduced to single words, mottoes to put beneath a profile on a commemorative coin or medal: “Evolution!” for one and “Emancipation!” for the other. Though, with the usual irony of history, the mottoes betray the men. Lincoln came late... and reluctantly to emancipation, while perhaps the least original thing in Darwin’s amazingly original work was the idea of evolution... We’re not wrong to work these beautiful words onto their coins, though: they were the engineers of the alterations. They found a way to make those words live. Darwin and Lincoln did not make the modern world. But, by becoming "icons" of free human government and slow natural change, they helped to make our moral modernityDarwin’s native land celebrates his bicentenary through Darwin200. Wikipedia provides external links to his seminal book, On the Origin of Species (1859), in the public domain (PublicLiterature.Org has the full text with embedded audio).
The deepest common stuff the two men share, though, is in what they said and wrote—their mastery of a new kind of liberal language. They matter most because they wrote so well. Lincoln got to be president essentially because he made a couple of terrific speeches, and we remember him most of all because he gave a few more as president. Darwin was a writer who published his big ideas in popular books. A commercial publishing house published The Origin of Species in the same year that it published novels and memoirs, and Darwin’s work remains probably the only book that changed science that an amateur can still sit down now and read right through. It’s so well written that we don’t think of it as well written, just as Lincoln’s speeches are so well made that they seem to us as obvious and natural as smooth stones on the beach.
Source: Smithsonian Magazine, February 2009
For links to Lincoln-related information, see HyperLincs: Celebrating Abraham Lincoln’s 200th birthday online (great tip to check out iTunes U for its access to free lectures from universities).
New Year Resolutions
Image credit: ohdearbarb
I should have written this last month. Anyway, I’m dusting away the cobwebs on this blog to usher in some good cheer, despite the economic gloom.
And is it too late for making new year resolutions (NYRs)? Well, I’m no fan of NYRs. But after reading these bold, flossy, funny resolutions (in comments section, all because of a free book), I was inspired to write my own:
1. Join the slow blogging movement, as blogging is like exercise for the brain.
2. Catch up on 17 (to-date) unread books, before buying or borrowing more.
3. Revisit these beautiful places in Europe: Chamonix, Interlaken, Lake District (links to Flickr Search results).
4. Learn falconry at Ireland’s School of Falconry on the grounds of Ashford Castle, or in the Scottish Highlands.
Admittedly, the last two are on my someday/maybe list.
Sidenote: A someday/maybe list is to track things that you want to do, but do not have the resources or bandwidth to work on them in the short term. The idea came from the bestselling Getting Things Done (GTD) book by David Allen. However, this sort of list can morph into a procrastination or fantasy zone. To keep mine in lean shape, I turn to these useful ideas for pruning someday/maybe lists.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)